Food Standards Agency
https://www.food.gov.uk/ Central office in London; other offices in York, Wales (Cardiff), and Northern Ireland (Belfast)
- Risk assessment
- Risk communication
- Risk management
- Research
- INFOSAN Contact Point for food incidents
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) is the central authority in the field of food safety in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. It is an independent non-ministerial Government Department governed by an independent Chair and non-executive Board responsible for the overall strategic direction of the organisation and for ensuring it meets its legal obligations. The FSA is accountable to the UK Parliament in Westminster, the Northern Ireland Assembly, and the Welsh Parliament through Health Ministers.
The FSA's main objectives in law are to protect public health from risks arising from the consumption of food and generally to protect the interests of consumers in relation to food. This includes providing information and advice to the public in connection with food safety, commissioning or coordinating research in science on such matters and supervising the safety of animal feed and other interests of users of animal feed.
FSA statutory powers include the power to carry out observations of this activity, monitor the performance of enforcing the applicable legislation by the relevant enforcement authority, issue guidance on control of foodborne disease and anything which facilitates the exercise of the FSA statutory function.
The FSA receives information and independent advice from its expert scientific advisory committees. The FSA normally publishes risk assessments on its website, and the main policy issues are decided in public by the FSA Board in open session in the light of scientific and other evidence. The FSA advises the UK, Wales, and Northern Ireland governments.
The FSA mission is ‘food you can trust’, and its vision for the food system is one in which:
- Food is safe.
- Food is what it says it is.
- Food is healthier and more sustainable.
The FSA directly delivers controls in meat, primary dairy and wine production. FSA staff and veterinary contractors inspect, audit, and assure businesses, including the signing of export health certificates. The FSA work with local authorities who inspect local businesses selling food – setting the inspection framework and providing advice and guidance. The FSA do the same for port health authorities, who inspect food imports.
The FSA advise ministers on food safety, food authenticity and consumer interests in relation to food in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. The policy areas the FSA advise on are different in each nation. This is underpinned by risk assessments of new developments using science and evidence.
Across the three nations the FSA has responsibility for food and feed safety and hygiene; and food safety labelling, including allergen labelling. In Wales and Northern Ireland, the FSA is additionally responsible for compositional standards and labelling. In Northern Ireland, only the FSA is additionally responsible for nutritional standards and labelling and dietary health and surveillance. On relevant issues, the FSA cooperates closely with Food Standards Scotland, the Department for Health and Social Security (DHSC), the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), devolved governments in Wales and Northern Ireland and local authorities.
Now that the UK has left the EU, the FSA make recommendations to ministers about which food and feed products should be authorised for sale on the market in Great Britain and advise on the implications of regulatory changes in Northern Ireland. The FSA, with Food Standards Scotland, carry out risk analysis for these regulated products and provide advice to ministers, who decide whether the product can be placed on the market in England, Wales, and Scotland. The FSA also support the government’s work on trade opportunities for the UK, by providing risk assessments of countries that want to start importing to the UK and demonstrating the UK's own food safety arrangements to countries it exports to. The FSA provide policy advice to support the delivery of effective and risk-based official controls – these are inspections, audits and surveillance, and sampling in food businesses.
The FSA's other areas of work include science and research on foodborne disease, food contaminants and food hypersensitivity; setting expectations for local authority food inspectors; food and feed regulation; tackling the most serious food fraud; consumer research on food issues; food and feed incident handling and response; and inspections of abattoirs and primary production. The FSA also has a role in looking at food safety implications of work undertaken by other government departments in the authorisation and surveillance of pesticides and veterinary medicines.
The FSA is also responsible for designating the official laboratories that carry out important chemical and compositional analyses on food and feed samples taken by local authorities or port health authorities. We do not own or operate any of these laboratories.
The FSA has posted a list of official laboratories in Great Britain and Northern Ireland that are designated to undertake sample analysis work.