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                        | Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.  Kennedy Jr. flanked by Director of the National Institutes of Health Jay  Bhattacharya (left) and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner  Marty Makary, (right), speaks during a news conference on the FDA’s  intent to phase out the use of petroleum-based synthetic dyes in the nation’s  food supply at the Hubert Humphrey Building Auditorium in Washington. (AP  Photo/Jose Luis Magana) |  US health officials seek  to phase out artificial dyes from the food supply
 WASHINGTON (AP) -- US  health officials say they will urge foodmakers to phase out petroleum-based  artificial colours in the nation’s food supply, but stopped short of promising  a formal ban and offered few specifics on how they intended to achieve the sweeping  change.Food and Drug  Administration Commissioner Marty Makary said at a news conference Tuesday that  the agency would take steps to eliminate the synthetic dyes by the end of 2026,  largely by relying on voluntary efforts from the food industry. Health  Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who joined the gathering, said he had heard  from food manufacturers, but had no formal agreements with them.
 “We don’t have an  agreement, we have an understanding,” Kennedy said.
 The officials said the  FDA would establish a standard and timeline for industry to switch to natural  alternatives, revoke authorisation for dyes not in production within coming  weeks and take action to remove remaining dyes on the market.
 “Today, the FDA is asking  food companies to substitute petrochemical dyes with natural ingredients for  American children as they already do in Europe and Canada,” Makary said.
 The proposed move is  aimed at boosting children’s health, he added.
 “For the last 50 years we  have been running one of the largest uncontrolled scientific experiments in the  world on our nation’s children without their consent,” he said.
 The process to revoke  approved additives from the food supply typically takes several years and  requires public comment, agency review and final rulemaking procedures.
 Industry groups said that  the chemicals are safe and suggested they would try to negotiate with  regulators to keep them available.
 “FDA and regulatory  bodies around the world have deemed our products and ingredients safe, and we  look forward to working with the Trump Administration and Congress on this  issue,” said Christopher Gindlesperger, spokesman for the National  Confectioners Association. “We are in firm agreement that science-based  evaluation of food additives will help eliminate consumer confusion and rebuild  trust in our national food safety system.”
 Health advocates have  long called for the removal of artificial dyes from foods, citing mixed studies  indicating they can cause neurobehavioural problems, including hyperactivity  and attention issues, in some children. The FDA has maintained that the approved  dyes are safe and that “the totality of scientific evidence shows that most  children have no adverse effects when consuming foods containing colour  additives.”
 The FDA currently allows  36 food colour additives, including eight synthetic dyes. In January, the  agency announced that the dye known as Red 3 — used in candies, cakes and some  medications — would be banned in food by 2027 because it caused cancer in laboratory  rats.
 Artificial dyes are used  widely in US foods. In Canada and in Europe — where synthetic colors are  required to carry warning labels — manufacturers mostly use natural  substitutes. Several states, including California and West Virginia, have  passed laws restricting the use of artificial colours in foods.
 The announcement drew  praise from advocates who say the dyes carry health risks and serve no purpose  beyond the cosmetic.
 “Their only purpose is to  make food companies money,” said Dr Peter Lurie, president of the Centre for  Science in the Public Interest and a former FDA official. “Food dyes help make  ultraprocessed foods more attractive, especially to children, often by masking  the absence of a colorful ingredient, like fruit.”
 (Latest Update April 25, 2025)
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