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Teenagers campaign for 'traffic light' labels on food packaging – The Guardian, Theguardian.com

Teenagers campaign for 'traffic light' labels on food packaging – The Guardian, Theguardian.com

Group calls for warnings to be displayed on items high in fat, salt and sugar to tackle obesity

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() A pizza from Sainsbury’s, which has adopted the ‘traffic light’ system, alongside products with alternative labeling. Photograph: Press Association

A fledgling campaign group led by teenagers is calling for (traffic light) – style front of pack labeling to be made mandatory in the UK.

The Bite Back 8530 campaign said progress on improving child health was stalling and that the move would bring the UK in line with other countries. These include Israel , which this week announced new laws making warning labels compulsory on packaged products high in fat, salt and sugar. Elsewhere, Canada also plans to introduce mandatory warning labels, while Chile introduced them in .

In October, the public health minister, Jo Churchill, publicly committed to launching a review into labeling in the UK early this year.

Bite Back was set up in to create an “unstoppable movement” of young people to campaign for healthier eating. Its aim is to half childhood obesity by . It was co-founded by chef Jamie Oliver , who has criticized the way junk food is advertised.

The organization has a youth board consisting of 14 teenage activists, who are lobbying food companies and the government to improve access to healthy food. It is also urging young influencers to send out more positive messages about healthy eating to their millions of social media followers.

As well as Oliver, its ambassadors include model David Gandy, comedian Romesh Ranganathan , Love Island star Dr Alex George and experts from medical, nutritional and campaigning backgrounds.

Bite Back ‘s youth chair, – year-old Christina Adane from south London, said: “Labeling should be there to help us – not make it harder to know what’s healthy for us and what’s not.

“We want honest, simple and helpful labeling like the traffic light system out there on everything. And if food companies won’t do it voluntarily, we want the government to step up and step in. The UK should be leading by example, not falling behind. ”

In the UK, younger generations are becoming obese at earlier ages and staying obese for longer. It is estimated about one in five children aged (to) years old are obese, with a third of children aged between two and overweight or obese.

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