Israel to Label All Egg Imports

organic eggs label, free-range, organic, israel eggs from TurkeyIsraelis are averse to buying egg imports from Turkey, where the hens may not be inoculated against salmonella.

Free from the dilemma of buying the free-range or organic eggs (I own my own coop with eight hens), the Israeli government has decided to make a law that will require the Made-In label on every egg sold in Israeli supermarkets. The public was aghast apparently at the news that millions of the eggs sold on the local market do not originate in Israel, but come from countries such as Turkey which does not control for salmonella. Some 80 million eggs are imported to Israel every year from Turkey, more than half of the 3 percent of all foreign imports and the health inspection on these eggs are limited, according to Haaretz. Some of them are sold under the Tnuva label, which includes pictures of hens out to pasture in verdant fields. Likely the opposite of how these eggs are raised. 

The egg market in Israelis huge, turning over NIS 710 million a year (about $177 million USD). The dominant players are Tnuva with a 44% market share, followed by Glicksman (21%) and M. Lesser with 10%.

According to surveys more than 80 percent of Israelis would buy local eggs if given the choice, so the companies have an interest to hide this information from consumers. The new labelling would include a code that tells the conditions in which the chickens were raised.

The label law was reported this week in Haaretz, and it comes on the heels of last summer’s tent protests and an Israeli public that is demanding more and more transparency in food prices and the food market in general. I hope for all Israelis that the egg effort to label every egg will pay off in other directions too. There have been scandals in Israel over re-frozen beef and frozen fish from China pumped with water. And as they come to awareness, one firm has found outrageous levels of potential carcinogens in ceramic pots and pans.

Just today a local water report testing water at the tap from municipalities throughout Israel found unreasonable levels of heavy metals being supplied to homes throughout the country. A vast majority of the problems were found in Arab towns and villages. While the government regularly tests water in its municipal pipes, with the water coming up clean, this is the first time that water was tested at the taps. Outdated pipes are the reason for the unusually high levels of contaminants in the water, the report (and not yet online) stated.

So you’ve got a label on your eggs. One that you can feel good about. It’s time for the public to know where all our food comes from so that suppliers will be forced to be transparent, and the public better able to make educated decisions with their pockets.

Image of organic eggs from Shutterstock

Facebook Comments
Karin Kloosterman
Author: Karin Kloosterman

Karin Kloosterman is an award-winning journalist and publisher that founded Green Prophet to unite a prosperous Middle East. She shows through her work that positive, inspiring dialogue creates action that impacts people, business and planet. She has published in thought-leading newspapers and magazines globally, owns an IoT tech chip patent, and is part of teams that build world-changing products to make agriculture and our planet more sustainable. Reach out directly to [email protected]

Comments

comments

Get featured on Green Prophet Send us tips and news:[email protected]

5 thoughts on “Israel to Label All Egg Imports”

  1. Maurice says:

    I for one have not been aware eggs are being imported into Israel, due to this country’s wide spread poultry farms – including those that supply organic eggs.

    Regarding food imports to Israel from Turkey,I’m sure all exports from Turkey to Israel have been cut back due to the present state of relations between to two countries. We’ll know that relations are really bad when dried figs and apricots disappear from markets here when the annual Israel Tu Bishvat or Arbor Day comes about.

  2. Malenita says:

    What do you bet the label on those organic eggs is stamped with artificially colored ink? Egg shells are porous and the ink will certainly leech into the egg.

    Hopefully more local farms (or people like you keeping their own chickens) will start cropping up for they are the only real answer to these problems.

    1. I have always wondered about the safety of the ink dye used on eggs. Red, particularly not safe. Does anyone have more info on this?

  3. According to the Hurriyet Daily Turkey does inoculate its chickens and Turkey hasn’t exported eggs there in two months. Now some 90% of its exports are going to Iraq:

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-egg-companies-enjoy-exports-to-iraq-eu.aspx?pageID=238&nID=32682&NewsCatID=345

Comments are closed.