Regulation (EU) No 1308/2013 of the European Parliament and of the CouncilDangos y teitl llawn

Regulation (EU) No 1308/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 establishing a common organisation of the markets in agricultural products and repealing Council Regulations (EEC) No 922/72, (EEC) No 234/79, (EC) No 1037/2001 and (EC) No 1234/2007

ANNEX IVU.K.F1... SCALES FOR THE CLASSIFICATION OF CARCASSES REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 10

A.F2... scale for the classification of carcasses of bovine animals aged eight months or moreU.K.

I.DefinitionsU.K.

The following definitions shall apply:

1.

"carcass" means the whole body of a slaughtered animal as presented after bleeding, evisceration and skinning;

2.

"half-carcass" means the product obtained by separating the carcass symmetrically through the middle of each cervical, dorsal, lumbar and sacral vertebra and through the middle of the sternum and the ischiopubic symphysis.

II.CategoriesU.K.

The bovine carcasses shall be divided into the following categories:

Z

:

carcasses of animals aged from 8 months to less than 12 months;

A

:

carcasses of uncastrated male animals aged from 12 months to less than 24 months;

B

:

carcasses of uncastrated male animals aged from 24 months;

C

:

carcasses of castrated male animals aged from 12 months;

D

:

carcasses of female animals that have calved;

E

:

carcasses of other female animals aged from 12 months.

III.ClassificationU.K.

The carcasses shall be classified by successive assessment of:

1.

Conformation, defined as follows:

Development of carcass profiles, in particular the essential parts (round, back, shoulder)

Conformation classDescription

S

Superior

All profiles extremely convex; exceptional muscle development (double muscled carcass type)

E

Excellent

All profiles convex to super-convex; exceptional muscle development

U

Very good

Profiles on the whole convex, very good muscle development

R

Good

Profiles on the whole straight; good muscle development

O

Fair

Profiles straight to concave; average muscle development

P

Poor

All profiles concave to very concave; poor muscle development
2.

Fat cover, defined as follows:

  • Amount of fat on the outside of the carcass and in the thoracic cavity

    Class of fat coverDescription

    1

    low

    None up to low fat cover

    2

    slight

    Slight fat cover, flesh visible almost everywhere

    3

    average

    Flesh with the exception of the round and shoulder, almost everywhere covered with fat, slight deposits of fat in the thoracic cavity

    4

    high

    Flesh covered with fat, but on the round and shoulder still partly visible, some distinctive fat deposits in the thoracic cavity

    5

    very high

    Entire carcass covered with fat; heavy deposits in the thoracic cavity

[F3The appropriate authority may] subdivide each of the classes provided for in points 1 and 2 into a maximum of three subclasses.

IV.PresentationU.K.

Carcasses and half-carcasses shall be presented:

(a)

without the head and without the feet; the head shall be separated from the carcass at the atloido-occipital joint and the feet shall be severed at the carpametacarpal or tarsometatarsal joints;

(b)

without the organs contained in the thoracic and abdominal cavities with or without the kidneys, the kidney fat and the pelvic fat;

(c)

without the sexual organs and the attached muscles and without the udder or the mammary fat.

V.Classification and identificationU.K.

Slaughterhouses approved under Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council(1) shall take measures to ensure that all carcasses or half-carcasses bovine animals aged eight months or more slaughtered in such slaughterhouses and bearing a health mark provided for Article 5(2) in conjunction with Chapter III of Section I of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 854/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council(2) are classified and identified in accordance with the F4... scale.

Before identification by marking, [F5the appropriate authority] may grant authorisation to have the external fat removed from the carcasses or half-carcasses if this is justified by the fat cover.

B.F6... scale for the classification of pig carcassesU.K.

I.DefinitionU.K.

"Carcass" means the body of a slaughtered pig, bled and eviscerated, whole or divided down the mid-line.

II.ClassificationU.K.

Carcasses shall be divided into classes according to their estimated lean-meat content and classified accordingly:

ClassesLean meat as percentage of carcass weight
S60 or more
E55 or more but less than 60
U50 or more but less than 55
R45 or more but less than 50
O40 or more but less than 45
Pless than 40

III.PresentationU.K.

Carcasses shall be presented without tongue, bristles, hooves, genital organs, flare fat, kidneys and diaphragm.

IV.Lean-meat contentU.K.

1.The lean-meat content shall be assessed by means grading methods authorised by the [F7appropriate authority]. Only statistically proven assessment methods based on the physical measurement of one or more anatomical parts of the pig carcass may be authorised. Authorisation of grading methods shall be subject to compliance with a maximum tolerance for statistical error in assessment.U.K.
2.However, the commercial value of the carcasses shall not be determined solely by their estimated lean-meat content.U.K.

V.Identification of carcassesU.K.

Unless otherwise provided for [F8in retained EU law], classified carcasses shall be identified by marking in accordance with the F9... scale.

C.F10... Scale for the classification of sheep carcassesU.K.

I.DefinitionU.K.

The definitions of "carcass" and "half-carcass" laid down in point A.I shall apply.

II.CategoriesU.K.

The carcasses shall be divided into the following categories:

A

:

carcasses of sheep under 12 months old,

B

:

carcasses of other sheep.

III.ClassificationU.K.

The carcasses shall be classified by way of application of the provisions in point A.III. mutatis mutandis. However, the term "round" in point A.III.1 and in rows 3 and 4 of the table under point A.III.2. shall be replaced by the term "hindquarter".

IV.PresentationU.K.

Carcasses and half-carcasses shall be presented without the head (severed at the atlantooccipital joint), the feet (severed at the carpometacarpal or tarso-metatarsal joints), the tail (severed between the sixth and seventh caudal vertebrae), the udder, the genitalia, the liver and the pluck. Kidneys and kidney fat are included in the carcass.

[F11The appropriate authority may] permit different presentations when the [F12reference] presentation is not used.

V.Identification of carcassesU.K.

Classified carcasses and half-carcasses shall be identified by marking in accordance with the F13... scale.

(1)

Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 laying down specific hygiene rules for food of animal origin (OJ L 139, 30.4.2004, p. 55).

(2)

Regulation (EC) No 854/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 laying down specific rules for the organisation of official controls on products of animal origin intended for human consumption (OJ L 139, 30.4.2004, p. 206).