Senate approves minimum cocoa percentage in chocolates

Brazil's Senate approved on Wednesday (April 15) a bill setting minimum cocoa percentages in chocolates and requiring label disclosure. Previously passed by the Chamber of Deputies on March 17, it now awaits President Lula's sanction. The text outlines standards for various chocolate types and mandatory labeling.

Brazil's Senate approved on April 15, 2026, a bill substitute requiring minimum cocoa percentages in national and imported chocolates, with mandatory label information.

The text specifies standards: powdered chocolate with 32% cocoa; milk chocolate with 25% cocoa and at least 14% milk or derivatives; white chocolate with 20% cocoa butter and 14% milk; achocolatados and fantasy chocolates with 15% cocoa or cocoa butter; and sweet chocolate with 25% cocoa, including 18% cocoa butter and 12% non-fat solids. Products with at least 35% total cocoa solids will be classified simply as "chocolate," without qualifiers like bitter or semi-bitter, and with no more than 5% vegetable fats.

Relator Senator Angelo Coronel (Republicanos-BA) added adjustments rejecting greater regulatory intervention and easing labeling rules, to be detailed by the Executive. Labeling must state "Contains X% cocoa" on the front, occupying at least 15% of the area in legible letters.

Non-chocolate products cannot use misleading images or terms. Violations subject companies to Consumer Defense Code sanctions and other penalties. Industry groups like Abia, Abicab, and Aipc criticized the new labeling requirement after recent nutritional table adaptations.

If sanctioned, the law takes effect in one year, keeping current Anvisa rules meanwhile.

관련 기사

Brazilian deputies celebrate first-round approval of SUAS funding bill PEC 383/17 in the Chamber of Deputies.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approves SUAS funding PEC in first round

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved PEC 383/17 in first round on Wednesday (April 8), setting a 1% floor of net current revenue for the Unified Social Assistance System (SUAS). The bill still requires a second round in the Chamber and Senate review. It includes a gradual rollout for the federal government and immediate allocation for states and municipalities.

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved a bill on Wednesday that sets rules for the exploration of critical minerals and rare earths. The text includes R$ 5 billion in incentives and a council with veto power over foreign partnerships. The vote came on the eve of a meeting between Presidents Lula and Donald Trump.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Colombia's National Association of Entrepreneurs (Andi), via its Food Industry Chamber, voiced concerns over a Ministry of Health resolution draft to overhaul frontal and nutritional food labeling. The business group warns the proposal would create legal and technical instability, plus economic burdens for 51,200 sector companies.

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부