Marmalade can now be called marmalade starting today

Starting today more products in Germany may be labeled as marmalade. A new regulation from the Federal Ministry of Agriculture implements an EU directive and also brings changes to honey labeling.

Previously EU law allowed only citrus fruit products to be sold as marmalade. All other fruit spreads had to be labeled as Konfitüre. The EU had amended the breakfast directive two years ago.

The new national regulation takes effect on 13 June 2026. Citrus marmalade must now be labeled as Zitrusmarmelade or with the specific fruit name. The original rule stemmed from British negotiations.

New rules also apply to honey. Jars with multiple countries of origin must now list them in descending order with percentage weight shares. Honey filled before the deadline may still be sold.

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The Swedish Food Agency introduces new rules for marmalade, juice and honey from June 14. The regulations set higher standards for content and labeling.

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Keir Starmer's UK government is pursuing greater regulatory alignment with the EU, requiring the traditional Seville orange 'marmalade' to be renamed 'citrus marmalade'. The BBC recently reported this measure, which eases trade but changes an iconic British name. The shift aligns with post-Brexit EU rules.

Mexico and the European Union signed the modernization of their global agreement on Friday at the National Palace. The ceremony was led by President Claudia Sheinbaum and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

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The Food and Drug Supervisory Agency has revoked distribution permits for 11 cosmetic products found to contain hazardous and prohibited substances following inspections in the first quarter of 2026.

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