Health Canada plans to remove foods derived from cloned cattle and swine from its "novel foods" list, a policy change that would end mandatory pre‑market safety reviews and public disclosure for such products. The proposal was disclosed via consultation documents and has drawn criticism for the lack of public announcement. Policy analysts and ethicists warn the administrative change could allow products from offspring of cloned animals onto the Canadian market without labels or dedicated safety reviews. Health Canada frames the move on compositional parity grounds; industry groups argue it reduces regulatory friction. The debate centers on transparency and traceability rather than new scientific safety concerns.