May 9, 2014

FSSAI Appellate Tribunals in process of being set up in various states

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has been in the process of constituting Appellate Tribunals in a number of states for the last couple of years, and they are yet to be constituted in such states as Assam, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal.
The states in which the process is pending include Andhra Pradesh, Goa, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Odisha, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand. 
K Chandramouli, chairperson of the country’s apex regulator, said that setting up an appellate tribunal was the responsibility of each state government, adding that FSSAI would provide just the required assistance to complete the process. 
“The majority of the state governments and food commissioners seem to be disinterested, which is why the formation of appellate tribunals is pending in many states and in a few, the process hasn’t commenced,” he added. 
Chandramouli said, “It is very sad that the states are not taking the matter seriously. The states where appellate tribunals haven’t be constituted yet do not understand the importance of setting up appellate tribunals for food safety and for the safety of the people of the particular state.”
“Although the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006, has come into effect, 14 states haven’t set up appellate tribunals. They should have Completed the process with the help of FSSAI authorities at the earliest,” he added. 
“Appellate tribunals are yet to be constituted, and the fact that their establishment is still in the process highlights the lackadaisical approach of the state food safety officials,” FSSAI’s chairperson said. 
“The lack of understanding of the process of setting up appellate tribunals, whether at the enforcement level or at the food business operators’ (FBO) level, has to be dealt with by the state governments, as the setting up of tribunals rests in their hands,” he added.
“Appellate tribunals have been established in just four states (Delhi, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka and Maharashtra) and two Union Territories (the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Chandigarh),” Chandramouli said. 
“The authorities of the states where appellate tribunals are yet to be constituted and in process should take the help of the states that have already established them, as they would be carrying more practical knowledge,” he added.
Dr H G Koshia, food safety commissioner, Food and Drugs Control Administration (FDCA), Gujarat, said, “The setting up of an appellate tribunal in Gujarat is 80 per cent completed. The state government has appointed a retired judge and a committee has also been formed.” 
“The judge would be deciding about the selection of tribunal officers. But now, due to the election, the ministers’ and senior officials’ signatures are pending. In a month, after the election result, the appellate tribunal will be in place,” he added.

874 kg of carbide-ripened mangoes destroyed

With summer reaching its peak, the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation’s health department has swung into action to prevent food poisoning cases and water-borne diseases. As part of this exercise, the department carried out raids on mango traders on Wednesday and destroyed 874 kg of carbideripened mangoes.
Raids were carried out in all six zones of the city. The department also seized five kg of carbide.
Apart from unhealthy mangoes, the department destroyed 194 litre of unhygienic mango juice and served notices to 168 units. It recovered Rs57,950 as administrative charges from vendors indulged in trading of unhealthy mango and juice, said a statement issued by the AMC.
Similar, raids were carried out on street food market at Hatkeshwar, Soni Ni Chali and Nikol and destroyed 48 kilogram as well as 124 litre of inedible food stuff on Tuesday. It issued notices to 41 food vendors and collected Rs20,050 as administrative charges.
The department has destroyed 20417 kilogram unhealthy food products since April 1, 2014. The department has also collected 32 samples of food products from the city under Food Safety and Standard Act since April 1. Of these samples, five have turned out to be unfit or substandard, while results of 11 are yet to come out. The civic body will initiate actions in against people involved in manufacturing and trading of unfit products.

FDA shuts 4 food units at Tisk-Usgao

PONDA: In a drive against the unhygienic andillegal food units, directorate of food and drugsadministration (FDA) raided four units at Tisk-Usgao, in Ponda and destroyed misbranded and unlabeled food articles worth 58,000 including gutka worth 18,500. FDA also sealed two units for unhygienic and filthy environment within their premises.
Food safety officers attached to the FDA, Rajiv Korde and Flavia DeSouza, conducted the raids on Thursday morning at the manufacturing units of wholesalers Mangu Singh, Yunus Khan andSanjay Kumar (All at Avanti Nagar in Tisk-Usgao), and Royal Sweets at Khandepar, who are engaged in manufacturing of farsan products.
These wholesalers were also found selling and distributing such food products without proper labels. Korde added that these units didn't have the necessary licenses thereby violating the provisions of the Food Safety and Standards Act.

Two food manufacturing units shut down in Merces

The Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) authorities raided and shut down two food item manufacturing units at Merces, after they detected that one of them was operating without food safety licence while the other was operating in unhygienic condition.
Unlabelled food articles worth around Rs 30,000 was confiscated and destroyed from both the units.
Speaking to Herald, FDA Director Salim Veljee informed that during one of its routine survey in the early hours on Wednesday, a team led by Senior Food Safety Officer Rajiv Korde and Food Safety Officer Flavio D'Souza intercepted two cyclists at Vodlem Bhat-Taleigao.
The cyclists were carrying large quantities of farsan items, toast, biscuits, etc, for distribution to various grocery shops, kiosks and other places in the city.
“On inspection, it was noticed that the food items were not carrying any label declaration and the physical appearance raised doubts in terms of the use of permitted colours,” said Veljee.
“Some items did not have other label declarations like best before use, name and address of manufacturers, food safety licence number and nutritional claims.”
Veljee then added that the team immediately confiscated and destroyed the food items worth around Rs 6500 from the two cyclists namely Ram Milan Singh and Karan Ram Singh.
“The two cyclists then led the team to a manufacturing unit at Voilem-Bhat, Merces owned by Sameer Nazir Ahmed who was operating the unit in the name of Reshma Bakers, and the premises were found to be very unhygienic,” Veljee said.
“There was no label declaration of the food articles. Due to the unhygienic conditions, the unit was asked to shut down,” he added.
Veljee informed that the team then raided a second manufacturing unit named Praveen Bakery at Vaddy-Merces which was operating without food safety license and it was also closed down.
He further informed that unlabelled food articles worth around Rs 30000 were confiscated and destroyed, from both the units.
“Both the manufacturing units have been shut down till all defects are rectified and they obtain food safety licence,” he stated.

Mango festival extended till May 14

The State Horticulture Mission will extend the National Honey and Mango Festival here to May 14. The decision, which was prompted by the impact of bad weather on sales, should come as a huge relief for farmers who had arrived with truckloads of fruit from across the State and beyond the border. The festival began at the Sooryakanthi grounds on Monday.
Mangoes priced between Rs.45 and Rs.115 a kilogram are available at the festival. Also on sale are mango saplings brought from nurseries under the Horticulture Mission.
This year’s festival has underlined the safety aspect, with food safety officials testing the fruits for carbide or other chemicals.
Legal action will be taken against groups who have brought tainted fruit, officials have warned.

Food Safety Authority encroaching on your life & liberty?

Thursday, 8th May, 2014: As of August 4, 2014, selling food on the street will be a criminal activity. Say goodbye to your favourite panipuri wala, sandwich wala, frankies stand and every other kind of street food vendor. Also bid farewell to small establishments like the neighbourhood mithaiwala, street-corner bakery, doodhwala, lassiwala and kulfi-wala. You will never again eat tangdi-kabab at roadside butcher-shops-cum-kabab-joints.
But it doesn’t end there. You should worry even if you are one of those enterprising housewives selling homemade chocolates, cupcakes, marzipan bunnies and Easter eggs to your friends and neighbours in the festive seasons. In the popular serial Taarak Mehta Ka Ulta Chasma, Madhavi Bhide — the typical middle-class housewife — supplements her penny-pinching husband’s income by supplying papads and pickles. Well, now Madhavi faces a choice: either take a license by paying a fee of Rs 2000/-, or face imprisonment of upto six months or penalty of upto Rs 5 lakhs, under Section 63 of the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006.
But even after she gets a licence, a designated Food Safety Officer may pay her a visit, find that her kitchen does not meet FSSAI’s standards, and ask her to spend some serious money in modifying her kitchen, or else shut down. If she fails to comply, she may be fined lakhs of rupees, or even imprisoned for six months. And even if Madhavi spends lakhs of rupees to upgrade her kitchen, the officer (a government employee empowered under the Food Safety and Standards Act) may still threaten to revoke her license. In order to keep her license, she may end up paying bribes of several thousand every month. 
Food Safety Standards Authority of India has notified July 1, 2014 as the deadline for getting registration and license with Food Safety and Standards Authority. We can hope that this deadline will be postponed as it has been since August 2012, which was the original deadline. But the sword will continue to hang over our heads… unless, of course, a new government elected at the Centre furiously back-pedals.
NOT JUST COOKS, BUT ALSO TRANSPORTERS AND SELLERS
Guys, say goodbye to the dabba-walla who carries your wife’s home-cooked lunch to your office. Yes, he doesn’t open the dabba and touch the food, but as he is a transporter and handler of food, he is a Food Business Operator as defined under the Food Safety (Licencing) Regulations 2011. The dabba-walla’s rough-and-ready travel by the Churchgate local’s luggage van cannot possibly meet FSSAI’s hygienic standards.
Your neighbourhood kirana-store, who sells grains, spices, nuts, oil, biscuits etc. is also in jeopardy. Unless he invests lakhs or crores of rupees for upgrading his shop with air-conditioners, glass doors, freshly painted ceilings and marble floors etc, he may not be given a license to sell food items. Then he cannot sell so much as a toffee or a bottle of packaged water.
This is the brave new world envisioned by Govt. Of India, which is scheduled to dawn after the July 1, 2014 deadline of Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations, 2011.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Bubbling with good intentions, the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations 2011, are a nationwide disaster-in-the-making. It is about to hit the common man right where it hurts most. Wham! Right in his wallet!
Indeed, the conditions imposed on storage, preparation and handling of foods are so stringent that even household kitchens and office canteens may not make the cut.
BIG BUSINESS IS THE GAINER
Who can possibly meet the impossibly high standards of food preparation and storage set by dozens of scientists at FSSAI? The likes of McDonalds and Pizza Hut may have no difficulties, and ditto for Pepsi, Coke, Haldirams and Britannia. Also, big retail outlets like D-Mart and Big Bazaar.
But small outfits will have no option but to close down, or to operate on the fringes as criminal offenders and fugitives. The current dispensation has given a death sentence to the entire unorganized food sector spread all over the country — consisting of many million self-employed men and women living in various cities, towns and even the remotest villages. In tiny settlements on snowy mountain-tops, or in the midst of forests and deserts, entire families and communities work together to survive by selling various food products to travelers and pilgrims. This vibrant food service industry of India is now marked for slaughter by Government of India. One is left wondering why.
Yes, these people will definitely try to survive by bribing the Food Safety Officers. But in the process, they will be harassed, accused of criminal offenses, and be made into undertrials or convicts — criminalized and marginalized for the offense of earning their living by selling food!
FLYING UNDER THE RADAR
How did this horrific thing come to pass? How did such a far-reaching legislation slip unnoticed, like a jumbo jet flying under the radar? One explanation is: it happened because the Food Safety Act 2006 and the lengthy licensing regulations seemed like a good thing at first.
Food was earlier regulated under various orders passed by the uniongovernment, such as Prevention of Food Adulteration Act 1954, Fruit Products Order 1955, Meat Products Order 1973, and Milk & Milk Product Order 1992. Some people in the food industry actively lobbied for all these orders to be unified, so that implementation would be easier. However, the unification exercise was taken up with so much zeal by bureaucrats that it led to a kind of bureaucratic overreach. In the words of Gokul Patnaik (098100 63433), a retired IAS officer who was formerly chairman of APEDA (Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority) is among those who lobbied for such a unification. And now, on hindsight, he regrets the outcome. “We seem to have created a Frankenstein’s monster, whose appetite for controlling our lives seems endless,” he remarks. 
Indeed, if you casually browse through Food Safety Act and Regulations with a common man’s eye, it seems like a well-intentioned (if over-ambitious) effort to improve the quality of the food that all of us – both rich and poor – eat and drink. The standards imposed on the licensees are formulated by committees peopled by well-known scientists from all over the country. These standards are aimed at reducing pesticides, enzymes, antibiotics, harmful bacteria, and biological contaminants like hair. Who can possibly argue with that? How can anybody say that it is not a good thing for safeguarding public health?
Public consultations were also held in 2008, and trade bodies like FICCI and CII represented civil society. Hawkers and enterprising housewives were never aware of these consultations, and even if they were aware, would not have been able to put across their concerns in a way that the bureaucrats would understand.
Indeed, the impossibility of holding genuine stakeholder consultations becomes apparent when you consider the mind-boggling span of the term “FoodBusiness Operator”. It climbs up the ladder of scale starting from the tiniest iterant chai-samosa vendors, temporary and permanent food stalls, home-based canteens and dabbawalas. It encompasses office and school canteens, langars in gurdwaras, distribution of various prasads in temples, religious gatherings and fairs, and wedding feasts. And at the top of the ladder are importers, packers, cold storages, warehouses, transporters, retailers, wholesalers, distributors and five star hotels.
Some traders’ associations and food manufacturers’ bodies opposed these regulations, but that too may have been written off as a knee-jerk reaction; after all, who among us says yes to more regulation? The remarks of Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT) can be found here here: http://www.cait.in/cait-articles.php (Article titled “Top Three Issues Under Food Safety Standard Act Faced by the Industry”)
The members of All India Food Processors Association (AIFPA) are on the central advisory committee, scientific panels and expert groups of Food SafetyAuthority. Dharam Vir Malhan (9868218848), Executive Secretary of AIFPA and formerly head of the Modern Foods, a government enterprise, is coordinating the participation of these members, who are deeply aware of the beneficial as well as adverse consequences of the proposed new licensing regime. “Going from feedback that I receive from food industry stakeholders at various levels, the new regulations are over-ambitious and at many places, highly impractical to implement,” Mr Malhan says mildly.
This is an understatement. The administrative burden at various levels is enormous and widespread. Registration under the Food Safety Act is to be done by local bodies i.e. municipalities and gram panchayats. The licensing mechanism is in state and centre, depending on the scale of the manufacturer. Large scale entities will require multiple licenses – one for each separate activity such as import, repacking, transportation etc., and one for each location of factories, warehouses, etc. The multiplicity of the paperwork required, and the massive reach and discretionary powers of the officials within the registration and licensing mechanisms is a sure-fire formula for both corruption and administrative overload.
According to its preamble, the Food Safety Act was conceptualized to consolidate the existing food laws; one presumes that the intention was to simplify, and not to complicate. Very clearly, this exercise has gone off track.
KILLING MICRO-ENTERPRISES & SELF-EMPLOYMENT AT BIRTH
The full menace of the regulations has clearly not been understood by civil society and activists; otherwise human rights crusaders would have been up in arms! Because even mild enforcement of these regulations will criminalize over 99 per cent of the non-packaged food sector in our country, rendering them liable for penalties of several lakhs of rupees and several months of imprisonment. If that is not a human rights outrage, then what is?
Such a formal business environment – where one is required to get a registration and license before selling his first plate of vada-pav – means that tiny food businesses may never come into existence… or may be seen as an unlawful enterprise from day one!
Let us take an example to understand how 
small businesses grow. Take the case of a neighbourhood auntie who prepares delicious parathas. One day, a group of young MBA students move into the neighbouring flat as paying guests. As a neighbourly gesture, the auntie sends them six parathas to go with their morning tea. They love the fresh hot parathas, and so they request the auntie to send them a dozen parathas every morning for their breakfast, and they voluntarily offer to pay Rs 5 per paratha. And then, word spreads among their friends, and the auntie, who used to cook only for herself and her family, now finds herself supplying parathas to several groups of paying guests in the neighbourhood. Voila, a food entrepreneur is born!
However, FSSAI’s regulations say that as soon as the students offer to pay for the parathas, the auntie has to apply for a license from FSSAI and pay Rs 2000 for a license. The Food Safety Officer may then come to her house and check her kitchen. He may deny her a license if her ceiling paint is peeling off, and while parting, warn her that if she continues to feed her neighbours, he can fine her Rs 5 lakh or drag her before a special court and get her imprisoned for six months! Behold, a food entrepreneur has been killed at birth!
CRIMINALIZING INNOVATORS
Indian cuisine is full of experimental products, and street foods are at the cutting edge of experimentation. For example, popular items like bread pakodas, Chinese Bhel, roti-rolls and kathi-rolls and novelty items like ice-cream pakodas have all sprung up in response to entrepreneurial inventiveness sustained by market demand. All Indian foods have been created in this way. An over-scientific approach to the process and formulation is toxic to innovation. So, it is alarming that FSSAI’s bloated bureaucratic set-up wants to not only control the cooking and storage environment, but also control the FORMULATION of each and every item, and confine it within documented parameters!
Under the new FSSAI regime, all known items are standardized and their formulations are written down. If someone wishes to make a new item – say an item like bread-pakoda using crushed banana wafers in the filling – then he must first submit this formulation to FSSAI and seek their approval for it – a process that typically takes two or three years. And the new regime makes producing such innovative foods and selling them without approval a punishable offense! 
It is both audacious and ridiculous to even attempt an exercise of defining standards for every food in India. Because a “chutney” in every state, every district, every tehsil, every caste and community has very different ingredients and methods of preparation. A simple thing like a roti tastes very different in every household, and has varying amounts of ghee, salt, thickness, diameter etc. The same goes for hundreds of types of halwas made in temples, gurdwaras and sweetmeat shops. How can a centralized body of scientists and bureaucrats like FSSAI impose standards for such things? But that is precisely what it is doing!
Manufacturing apart, it is also an offense now to import and sell a novel food that is well accepted abroad but not currently being sold in India – such as, say, fresh strawberries encased in a hard chocolate cover. Importers will not be able to release their stocks into the markets unless FSSAI first tests and approves it for public consumption.
Gokul Patnaik remarks, “If this sort of pre-approval process were in force in olden days, the halwais could never have invented foods like rasgollas and jelebis. Innovations happen in the kitchen at the spur of the moment, and the only approval needed is from the tastebuds of customers willing to pay for them. For bureaucrats to insist that a gulab jamun must only have this much sugar and this much ghee – no more and no less – is to impose a bureaucratic approach on cooking itself! This can only result in killing innovation!”
IMPOSING INSPECTOR RAJ OVER FOOD
The FSSAI Act mandates Food Safety Commissioners in every state to appoint numerous government employees as Food Safety Officers, with powers to slap a closure notice on any Food Business Operator, and also slap penalties of upto one lakh on them for any offense defined under the Food Safety Act. In the name of safeguarding the health and well-being of India, this is a return to inspector-raj and rampant bribery, far worse than the pre-liberalization days.
India’s people have to raise their voice against this over-zealous bureaucracy, and the time is now.

First Agro taking control of the greens on your plate with ‘zero pesticide’

As a kid I was always told, “Sabji/daal kha lo pehle, phir chicken khaana,” which would roughly translate to “eat your greens before you eat your chicken.” 
I believe it’s a deal every parent makes with their child — an arrangement to keep both the interested parties happy. To this day I still follow that mantra. The reason I opened with this anecdote is because this story is about exactly that — the greens on your plate. 
“We are a ‘zero pesticide’ organization,” says Naveen MV, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of First Agro, adding, “We don’t do organic farming. We’ve taken it a step ahead. We don’t use pesticides at all!” Naveen MV 
What is he talking about? Isn’t that the same thing? 
“Organic farming is just a method of cultivation. It may not mean that there are no pesticides used. We don’t call ourselves organic because we have taken it a step further by following the Codex standards and without using any pesticides, referred to as ‘zero pesticide’. In fact, the term ‘zero pesticide’ is a trademark term that is used only by First Agro,” explains Naveen. “Organic farmers are like students who study for the 10th grade exam but never care to write the exam,” he jokes, “Unless you don’t subject a produce to pesticide residue test by following a global food safety standard, how will you know if any pesticides was used or not?” 
What are Codex standards? 
The Codex Alimentarius Commission was established in 1963 by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Health Organization (WHO). Codex has become the global reference point for consumers, food producers and processors, national food control agencies and international food trade. Essentially, Codex has defined global food safety standards to ensure that consumers are not exposed to unsafe levels of hazardous and toxic materials through their food. 
The Codex Alimentarius Commission has developed something called the Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs) for Pesticides and Extraneous Maximum Residue Limits. Every time a pesticide is used, the plant will absorb some of it. The left over bit will show up as residue when tested, and if it is beyond the MRL, then it is considered to be toxic for human consumption. 
“We get our produce tested once in six months from one of only three labs in India that specialize in Codex testing. I’m proud to say our produce has never detected any residue of any pesticide! You see, we are a ‘zero pesticide’ organization. We stick to that,” Naveen claims. 
What does First Agro do? 
“First Agro is the only company in India to reach the highest level of food safety according to the Codex standards,” states Naveen. First Agro has 45 acres of land under production in Talkad near Mysore. 
Over the next seven to eight years, they plan to invest about $ 20 million to acquire 1,500 acres of land and bring it under production across 16 locations in North, West and South India. The 1,500 acres will be broken into clusters, each with an area of around 100 – 150 acres, with integrated production, pack house, cold storage and processing centers. 
The first fully operational cluster at Talkad is called ‘Cauvery’. “All our farms are company owned and managed. We don’t indulge in any form of contract farming. We have a dedicated team of growers who are highly qualified graduates of horticulture or agriculture from the best agriculture universities in India. As of now we have 11 growers who supervise the farm production on their four to five acre unit. Each grower has their own dedicated team of supervisors, and labour from neighbouring villages,” explains Naveen. 
First Agro grows more than 40 different varieties of fruits, vegetables and herbs, most of which have never before been grown in India. You can discover some of their fascinating produce, at the bottom of the page. About 70% of their revenue comes from retailers like Hyper City, Auchan, More, Food Hall, etc. The rest of the revenue comes from Nameet their ‘Chef’s Garden’. “The Chef’s Garden is a concept which caters to institutional customers like international hotels and fine-dining restaurants. Our clients are the chefs of Ritz Carlton, JW Marriott, The Oberoi, and The Taj, etc. It’s something we like to call ‘Farm to Fork’,“ states Naveen. 
The company was started by Nameet, Naveen MV and KN Prasad. Nameet is the Chief Production Head at First Agro. He used to be a commercial pilot in Vancouver. He has an in-depth knowledge in Olericulture (the science of vegetable growing), Hydroponics (the science of growing plants without soil) and Integrated Pest and Disease Management (using natural solutions to manage and deter pests). 
He has pioneered the Zero Pesticide cultivation by using natural methods; methods that he learned through a hands-on experience by working with multiple horticulture specialists in Canada, over many years. He works out of theTalkad farm. Naveen MV is the Chief Executive Officer and is currently based in Yokohama, Japan, where he handles the International operations and planned expansion of First Agro in Japan and South East Asian markets like Malaysia (due to begin in six months). 
He also runs an Information Technology services organization in Japan. KN Prasad KN Prasad is the Chief Operating Officer. He heads agriculture supply chain management and logistic functions. His team is responsible for getting the produce from the farms to the city in as little time, and as fresh as possible. 
Why is all of this important? 
“The Indian government along with the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) will drive food safety standard across farmers, food processors and retailers to ensure compliance with Codex standards by 2015,” Naveen tells me. “Well, that’s good news, right?” I ask. “Yeah, it is. But you can’t really turn your eye away from what’s happening today,” he says seriously. 
He asked me to watch this documentary by TERI (and I urge all of you to take some time to do the same) called ‘Slow Poisoning of India’ which talks about India’s use of Endosulfan, a pesticide which is used in large quantities on our food, at the source. The video shows the chilling effects of the widespread use of this pesticide, on the farmers using them, the community they live in and the adverse effects on the consumers of the food. When used excessively and carelessly, the pesticide results in families battling with tragedies like physical deformities, cancer and disability of the central nervous system. 
The levels of sickness are so extreme that there is a train nicknamed ‘Cancer Express’ that travels from Bhatinda to Bikaner, because it carries hundreds of patients with cancer to be treated in the only free cancer facility (under the free medicine scheme) in the area. “We did a lot of groundwork initially, and the results were startling. A massive chunk of the population is largely ignorant about the way our food is grown. Young adults and children have never given thought to the effect of fertilizers and pesticides on our food and on the environment. I mean, I can safely say that 99% of the population is unaware of all the negative effects,” Naveen reveals gravely. “To top it off, the scene in the agriculture industry isn’t any better. 
Did you know that India has only 95 million farmers today? That’s just 8 % of the population, down from 14% from the time of the Green Revolution. The average land holding per farmer is down to only two acres. Up to 2,000 farmers leave farming every day, which is not good for the sector and the country. By 2050, India’s population is estimated to be at a staggering 1.5 billion. 
With a drop in the number of farmers, and such a sharp increase in the population, who can deny that food security isn’t a huge issue!” exclaims Naveen. Clocwise from top left – Yukon Purple Colour Capsicum, Vintage Heirloom Tomatoes, Bishop’s Crown Red Chillies, Yellow Tushita Tear Drop Cherry Tomato.