Vegetarian and non-vegetarian marks
Appearance
This article needs more links to other articles to help integrate it into the encyclopedia. (September 2015) |
Vegetarian and non-vegetarian marks | |
---|---|
Effective region | India |
Effective since | 2006[citation needed] |
Product category | Packaged food products |
Legal status | Mandatory |
Mandatory since | 2011[citation needed] |
Packaged food products sold in India are required to be labelled with a mandatory mark in order to be distinguished between lacto-vegetarian and non-lacto-vegetarian.[1] The symbol is in effect following the Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and Labelling) Act of 2006, and got a mandatory status after the framing of the respective regulations (Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and Labelling) Regulation) in 2011.[1] According to the law, vegetarian food should be identified by a green symbol and non-vegetarian food with a brown symbol.[1]
Restaurants use voluntary Vegan Friendly mark to denote availability of vegan options. Packaged food manufacturers also use a variation of Vegan Friendly mark their Vegan offerings.