Experts Call for Stricter Regulations on Ultratransformed Foods and Additive Safety

May 21, 2026
Experts Call for Stricter Regulations on Ultratransformed Foods and Additive Safety
  • A large body of evidence links harmful health effects to ultratransformed foods, with researchers calling for public health action and possible reevaluation or restrictions of certain additives, especially colorants.

  • Experts urge re-evaluating additive safety and potentially banning the most controversial colorants or reducing approved doses, particularly those added for mere attractiveness.

  • While the studies show associations rather than definitive causation, they reinforce concerns that ultra-processed foods are unhealthy and justify tightening additive safety and possible bans or dose reductions.

  • A major French study within the NutriNet-Santé cohort followed over 112,000 participants and linked eight preservatives to higher blood pressure over ten years.

  • Policy relevance is underscored as Nutri-Score labeling becomes a focal point for helping consumers choose healthier options, with proposals to make it mandatory in France.

  • A French law proposal would mandate Nutri-Score labeling on products and channel a 2% sales tax from non-compliant companies to the national health system; Nutri-Score grades range from A to E.

  • Activist groups and experts, including Foodwatch, press for urgent regulatory action on ultratransformed foods and clearer labeling, pointing to Nutri-Score as a tool for healthier choices.

  • Researchers tracked participants’ intake by brand for three-day periods every six months, using ingredient databases and health records to assess exposure and outcomes.

  • The research is led by groups including CRESS-EREN, with affiliations to Inserm, Inrae, and Université Sorbonne‑Paris Nord.

  • The full article originates from Le Monde and is subscriber-only content.

  • European regulations are stricter than U.S. rules, yet findings suggest even European-approved additives, including natural substances, require closer scrutiny.

  • Antioxidants used as preservatives may differ in health effects from naturally occurring antioxidants in fruits and vegetables, highlighting a distinction between natural substances and their preservative contexts.

Summary based on 8 sources


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