Sep 4, 2015

Bombay high court reduces number of Maggi noodles samples for test

Nestlé India now has to test 45 samples within the next six weeks before it can get the go-ahead to resume sales

Mumbai: The Bombay high court on Friday admitted Nestlé India Ltd’s plea to reduce the number of samples to be tested to 45 across three accredited laboratories. According to the court’s earlier order, 3,750 samples had to be tested.
“By an order passed today, the court was pleased to allow Nestlé India’s application praying for bringing out certain factual corrections in the judgement dated 13 August 2015 and for seeking clarity on certain aspects of sampling for tests to be conducted in accordance with the directions of the court. The court has allowed that five samples of each variant be sent to the three accredited laboratories for testing,” Rajesh Batra, counsel for Nestlé, said.
On 28 August, Nestlé had moved the court to allow it to send five random samples of each of the nine variants to three accredited laboratories, instead of sending five samples for each of the 750 batches of all nine variants, as directed by the court in its 13 August order.
The 13 August ruling, which was in Nestlé’s favour, had set aside the 5 June ban by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) on the sale and manufacture of Maggi noodles in India.
However, it had directed Nestlé to test 3,750 samples. Based on the test results, the company would be allowed to resume manufacture and sale of Maggi noodles, the court had said.
Following the hearing on Friday, the company now has to test 45 samples within the next six weeks before it can get the go-ahead to resume sales. The sampling procedure will be decided by the food safety officer, the court said.
Meanwhile, with the country’s largest noodles brand off the shelves, yoga guru Ramdev has launched his own brand of atta noodles from his consumer packaged foods company, the Patanjali Group. These noodles are a healthy alternative to Maggi noodles, Ramdev claimed.
Also, ITC Ltd, maker of Yipee noodles, has launched a fresh campaign for its noodles, which talks about the safe and hygienic environment and quality standards the company uses in manufacturing the product.
Nestle has also launched three commercials on its official YouTube channel Meri Maggi as it looks at keeping the brand alive in the minds of its consumers. Bringing Maggi noodles back to retail shelves was a priority, Nestlé India managing director Suresh Narayanan said in August in an interview to television channel CNBC TV18.

The mess that is food regulation


Safety norms should be implemented with a firm but even hand, as in the US. The Maggi episode smacks of arbitrariness
September 3, 2015: 
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has produced a volcanic blast in the Indian food processing industry.
In the process, it is not just Maggi or Nestle which has been singed; the law and the regulator, the Food Safety and Standard Act, 2006 (FSSA), and the FSSAI, have been scathed as well. This is especially after the Bombay High Court’s order questioning the lab test results and violation of the principles of natural justice by it, during the process. Both, consumer safety and investment climate are at stake; we need a convergent approach.
In the minds of consumers, while the credibility of the unorganised packaged and non-packaged food products was always in doubt the controversy has eroded their faith in one of the most trusted brands. The entire episode does not bode well for the development of India’s nascent food processing industry.
The industry in India
India is one of the largest producers of food products in the world, while the level of food processing is less than 10 per cent of the agri-produce. Some ₹44,000 crore worth agri-produce is wasted annually. Food processing has multiplier effects on our economy, being one of the largest employment creators. It provides a boost to farm incomes, reduces massive agri-produce wastage, enables value creation through the manufacture of packaged foods, drives investment in cold chain and storage houses, manages supply-side food inflation, attracts domestic and foreign investment, and contributes to exports, amongst others. The sector is especially significant for small and medium enterprises and creating non-farm jobs in rural areas. Due to this immense potential, it is a priority area in the ‘Make in India’ initiative.
For long, the Maggi debate has run along the lines of ‘for or against’ Maggi or FSSAI. Another set of commentators has raised the question of balancing consumer interests with the development of the food industry. However, it is wrong to assume that stringent food safety standards and their implementation runs counter to the development of the food processing industry.
The US for example, is a leading country in the food processing sector, with the world’s most credible and stringent food regulatory regime. Indeed, strong, credible, well-defined, transparent, predictable food safety and regulatory standards and their non-arbitrary, swift, regular implementation, is an imperative for the expansion of our food processing industry. An effective food regulatory regime creates a high level of national and international consumer confidence in processed food products.
The why-me syndrome
While the jury is still out on the Maggi issue, the entire episode raises a few pertinent issues. Why was only Maggi handpicked for the tests? The irregularities in the Indian food industry in the form of adulteration, lack of quality check, misleading labelling, sale of defective food products and other unfair trade practices that go on, are not exceptions but the norm.
Such singling out of one brand gives rise to sense of being victimised, opens the floodgates for political manipulation and corruption, and sets out the wrong precedent where not the rule of law but arbitrariness seems to follow. Such uncertainty also scares away existing and prospective investors from the food processing sector. The effect is already visible as companies withdraw their products from the market and put new launches on hold. Now, the FSSAI has launched an investigation into some other products, yet a uniform, non-arbitrary, across the board application of the law is still wanting. Before that, a reasonable period could be granted to the food industry to pull up its socks.
Further, if such glaring irregularities did exist, these did not occur overnight. How were they allowed to continue for such a long time? This reflects laxity on the part of Central as well as State food regulators, which are not undertaking regular inspections and testing of products. A lack of proper coordination between the two has also been pointed out. The varying results from different labs under the FSSAI bring the credibility of its tests under the cloud. The Bombay High Court order also underscores this fact.
The food industry has, in fact, highlighted that labs are substandard, their equipment is not upgraded, there is lack of modernisation, there are issues relating to corruption, a staff crunch and a lack of proper training facilities.
Coherence and credibility
The requirement of product approval requirement for ‘proprietary products’ — launched in 2013 and a major area of grievance for the sector because of the long delays it caused — has now been scrapped by the FSSAI, after the recent Supreme Court order against it. While greater clarity is needed on the procedure that will now be followed, this brings India closer to the global practice where companies do not require approval from regulators to launch a product, while also paving the way for adopting the international practice of registration of food processing enterprises and setting up a random inspection system.
The present uncertainty should be expediently removed, while continuously streamlining food safety standards to make them more comprehensive, coherent and up-to-date to innovations in the industry.
The food industry must be given a reasonable time to adapt and the implementation should be regular, non-arbitrary and credible internationally. This is the path to achieving the twin objectives of food safety and development of the food processing industry.
The writer is the secretary-general of CUTS International. This article has inputs from Sonal Shukla

Ramdev launches 'Atta noodles'

Yoga guru Ramdev on Thursday launched his Patanjali group's new brand of noodles made out of wheat named 'Atta Noodles'.
At the launch of the noodles in this Hindu holy city in Uttarakhand, Ramdev said the noodles "will not have any maida (flour) and they will provide a healthy alternative to Maggi for children."
The yoga guru said the noodles were completely safe and healthy for consumption, and he was promoting swadeshi products because they were natural and caused no harm.
The Patanjali group produces and markets various ayurvedic products.
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) had clamped a nationwide ban on June 5 on sale, production and stocking of Maggi, a popular snack in the country. It has been alleged that Maggi contained more-than-permissible levels of lead and high quantities of monosodium glutamate (MSG).

We have been made guilty without due process: Nestle India's MD

At a time when the Bombay high court ruled that the popular Maggi noodles, which stands banned in India for suspected high lead content, be re-tested before it can go on sale again, Nestlé India managing director Suresh Narayanan, who took over on August 1, tells HT about challenges ahead. Excerpts:
How will you describe the last one month?
It has been exciting and extremely challenging. But it has also been very humbling for me.

Do you suspect your competitors of foul play?
It is not for me to speculate on these issues. Honestly, such kind of speculation doesn’t help. The commitment to India remains strong and continues to be strong.

Do you think that in some manner a bit of the inspector raj is creeping back?
Nestlé is all for transparent standards. The issue we took up in Bombay High Court was not on standards. A difficult testing process needs a certain kind of infra­structure. The National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calib­ration Laboratories (NABL) has certified only a few laboratories to do this test. You haven’t done the testing in these labs to establish what lead content is there in Maggi.
And then you come up with some numbers, which have also got a wide range. We have done 2,700 tests on the brand Maggi after the controversy. About 1,100 of these have been done in overseas laboratories and accredited NABL laboratories.
We as a company are disappointed. We have been pronounced guilty without the due process having been completed. All I am saying is, treat me fairly.

Assuming fresh test results and the courts are in your favour, will you sue the government?
At this stage, such thoughts haven’t entered my mind. The first thought is to get Maggi back. We want to work with the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India as a professional body, and all stakeholders in a transparent manner to take business forward.

How would you respond to the view about a witch-hunt?
This company has never told me to do anything even remotely unethical. And the company stand is very clear. May be there was speculation in the outside world. Nobody has approached us. Even assuming that, hypothetically, it had happened, our ethical standards are very clear. It is non-negotiable.
There has been absolutely no attempt by anyone (from the government) to capitalise on this issue in any way that is inappropriate.

For the first time in 17 years, you have posted quarterly losses. How do you plan to turn things around?
I don’t have a magic wand. I am realist to the core. I know it is a long, tough journey up to build back this brand. Clearly, there are other parts of the portfolio that need to be rebuilt, because Maggi is 30% of our business... still a significant proportion... we have to build that back as well.
Over the next couple of years, I would really like to reduce it to about around 25% and raise the rest of the portfolio. And then hopefully accelerate to a more evolved balance as we move forward.

When can we expect Maggi to be back?
The whole process of testing will now start. My hope is that by the end of the year I can bring back the beloved Maggi brand to consumers.

But once you bring back the brand, how do you restore the brand’s shattered trust?
There are three angles to bringing back Maggi. One is that we have to reactivate the whole supply chain, value chain and logistics for this product. Five factories have been closed down, there are suppliers who are not supplying and there are distributers who are not distributing. There are distribution centres that have been very badly affected.
Second is in terms of the whole relaunch package, which has been worked on feverishly by our team. And the third piece is on communication and activation to build back trust in the brand.

What about other products?
There has been an impact because these products are going through a similar outlet channel, the grocery segment. But I am hoping that once we are able to build back Maggi, things will improve.

DINAMALAR NEWS


தயாரிப்பு தேதி, காலாவதி தேதி இல்லாமல் சீனா, ஜப்பான் மிட்டாய் விற்றால் கடும் நடவடிக்கை உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரி எச்சரிக்கை


நாகர் கோ வில், செப். 4:
குமரி மாவட்ட உணவு பாது காப்பு நிய மன அதி காரி சாலோ டீ சன் தலை மை யில் உணவு பாது காப்பு அதி கா ரி கள் வின் சென்ட் கிளாட் சன், முரு கே சன், சிறில் ராஜ், சிதம் ப ர தா ணு பிள்ளை ஆகி யோர் தக் கலை, திரு வட்டார், அழ கி ய மண் ட பம், வேர் கி ளம்பி பகு தி களில் உணவு விடு தி கள், பேக் க ரி களில் சோதனை நடத் தி னர். சோத னை யில் உண வ கங் களில் காலா வ தி யான உண வுப் பொ ருட் கள், குளிர் பா னங் கள் மற் றும் சீனா, ஜப் பான் மிட்டாய் கள், சாக் லேட் கள் தயா ரிப்பு தேதி மற் றும் காலா வதி தேதி இல் லா மல் விற் பனை செய் வது கண் ட றி யப் பட்டு அவை பறி மு தல் செய் யப் பட்டு, கடை உரி மை யா ளர் கள் முன் னி லை யில் அழிக் கப் பட்டது.
இது குறித்து உணவு பாது காப்பு நிய மன அதி காரி சாலோ டீ சன் கூறி ய தா வது: பொது மக் களுக்கு இடை யூறு இல் லா ம லும், கலப் ப டம் இல் லா ம லும், சுத் த மா க வும், சுகா தா ர மா க வும் பொருட் கள் விற்க வேண் டும். மேலும் சீனா, ஜப் பான் மீட்டாய் கள், சாக் லேட் கள் தயா ரிப்பு தேதி மற் றும் காலா வதி தேதி இல் லா மல் விற் பனை செய் வது கண் ட றிந் தால் மாநில உணவு பாது காப்பு தர நிர் ணய சட்டத் தின் படி தண் டனை வழங் கப் ப டும். இவ் வாறு அவர் கூறி னார்.