The Codex Alimentarius covers all foods, whether processed, semi-processed or
raw. In addition to standards for specific foods, the Codex Alimentarius contains general standards covering matters such as
food labeling, food
hygiene,
food additives and
pesticide residues, and procedures for assessing the safety of foods derived from modern
biotechnology. It also contains guidelines for the management of official i.e. governmental
import and
export inspection and
certification systems for foods. The Codex Alimentarius is published in the six
official languages of the United Nations:
Arabic,
Chinese,
English,
French,
Spanish and
Russian. Not all texts are available in all languages. As of 2017, the CAC had a total of 78 guidelines, 221 commodity standards, 53 codes of practice, and 106 maximum levels for contaminants of food (of which 18 covered contaminants). In a 2018 publication, the CAC stated that: "Codex has at times been criticized as slow to complete its work, but developing food standards and compiling them as a code that is credible and authoritative requires extensive consultation. It also takes time for information to be collected and evaluated, for follow-up and verification and, at times, for consensus to be found satisfying differing views. Overall, it takes an average of 4.2 years to develop a Codex standard – and significantly less for pesticide MRLs or food additive levels."
General texts •
Food labelling (general standard, guidelines on
nutrition labelling, guidelines on labelling claims) •
Food additives (general standard including authorized uses, specifications for food grade chemicals) •
Contaminants in foods (general standard, tolerances for specific contaminants including
radionuclides,
aflatoxins and other
mycotoxins) •
Pesticide and veterinary chemical residues in foods (maximum residue limits) •
Risk assessment procedures for determining the safety of foods derived from biotechnology (
DNA-modified plants, DNA-modified
micro-organisms,
allergens) • Food
hygiene (general principles, codes of hygienic practice in specific industries or food handling establishments, guidelines for the use of the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point or "
HACCP" system) • Methods of analysis and sampling
Specific standards •
Meat products (fresh, frozen, processed meats and
poultry) •
Fish and
fishery products (marine, fresh water and
aquaculture) •
Milk and milk products • Foods for special
dietary uses (including
infant formula and
baby foods) • Fresh and processed
vegetables,
fruits, and
fruit juices •
Cereals and derived products, dried
legumes • Fats, oils and derived products such as
margarine • Miscellaneous food products (
chocolate,
sugar,
honey,
mineral water) ==Classification of supplements and additives==