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Nachrichten.fr · May 27, 2026

Bill to Reduce Cadmium Contamination in Fertilizers Passed by the French National Assembly

Paris – 27.05.2026: A bill aiming to reduce cadmium contamination in phosphate fertilizers was passed by the French National Assembly. This step follows the scheduling of the bill for the Assembly’s agenda for the week of June 1, 2026.

The bill was approved by the National Assembly’s Committee on Economy and Finance. It was examined by this committee on February 4, 2026.

The purpose of the law is to protect the public from the health risks associated with cadmium contamination in food. Cadmium is a heavy metal found in phosphate fertilizers that can accumulate in soils and plants, leading to direct intake through human food.

The French government has already taken measures to limit cadmium contamination in fertilizers. In 2019, the French Agency for Food Safety (ANSES) recommended that the cadmium content in phosphate fertilizers should not exceed 20 milligrams per kilogram of phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5).

The bill is expected to be debated in the plenary session of the National Assembly next week and could be adopted in the following days. After parliamentary approval, the law will come into effect and contribute to reducing cadmium contamination in fertilizers.

This initiative is part of France’s efforts to raise environmental and health protection standards and safeguard the population from harmful chemicals in food.

Politically, the single wording is less decisive than the institutional context. Government, parties, parliament, or administration send signals that in France often have effects extending well beyond the immediate occasion. Therefore, it is worth observing which forces react, which terms are chosen, and whether a broader political direction becomes recognizable from the report.

For readers focused on France, the value of such reports lies not only in the quick news but in the orientation they provide. It is crucial which actors are mentioned, which location is affected, and whether the development indicates consequences for everyday life, politics, economy, culture, or public safety.

Further reliable details could still change the assessment. Until then, the article maintains a cautious approach: the known facts are contextualized without giving more certainty than the individual pieces of information allow.

Sources

  • Assemblée nationale
  • ANSES
  • Portail Réussir