Mar 2, 2016

Cutting the red tape in India's food sector


Indian regulations may become easier to navigate
India could be gearing up to streamline its notoriously bureaucratic system of food approval. This, industry experts argue, could not only shorten routes to market but also strengthen food safety in the country. Mini Pant Zachariah reports.
The notorious amount of red tape that can strangle the efficient import of branded food into India maybe reduced through the possible introduction of a Rre-Arrival Document Review (PADR) system, just-food was told at the India Food Forum in Mumbai.
Amit Lohani, founding director of the Forum of Indian Food Importers, explained that a pilot project for the new system will kick off this month. The pilot is being run by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
The complexity of India's import regulations are also a logistical headache. Importers of perishables like vegetables, fruits and meat have complained about the time it takes for Indian customs to clear their products, which they say adversely affects quality.
According to Anil Chandok, director of high-end importer Chenab Impex, it is "impossible to import something with a short shelf life" because it "would never be cleared by customs on time."
Lohani believes PADR could change that. "Under the PADR, an importer will upload information before the import starts. The authorities would then tell them whether the product conforms to the standards vis–à–vis the ingredients, the shelf life, best before date etc. It would help importers tremendously as their goods will not languish in the ports," he explains.
Indian food regulations are well known for being complex and this is to the detriment of food safety in the country. Food safety problems are commonplace and the issue gained national and international attention last year when Swiss multinational food giant Nestle's was forced to recall its Maggi instant noodle brand 2015.
The popular instant noodle brand was banned for a good part of 2015 after the FSSAI reported that packets of Maggi contained lead content beyond permissible limits as well as unlabelled monosodium glutamate (MSG). Nestle denied these accusations and subsequent tests failed to detect elevated levels of lead in the product.
However, by the time Nestle returned Maggi to shelves in November last year, considerable damage had been done. The recall trimmed about 30 basis points off Nestle's organic growth over the course of the ban. On Nestle's Asia, Oceania and Africa (AOA) division, the negative impact was about 170 bps.
While there is consensus within India's branded food industry that safety norms should be stringent and followed in India as in other countries, Lohani adds, "companies want the law [to] be clean, clear and easy to understand." He also wants to see more predictability in enforcement, with officials' interpretations of regulations currently varying significantly – increasing headaches for importers.
Labelling nomenclature in food safety is another concern. Chandok says that in this issue, India's food sector is still governed by antiquated laws set in 1954. "Labelling has become a big issue and involves cost," he warns. The sometimes nitpicking enforcement of complex labelling rules blocks safe imports, which has "reduced choices for the consumer", he continues. "It is not possible, for instance, to import wild forest mushrooms or organic tofu or a hundred other products now."
In a country with a young aspirational population exposed to global trends, this could represent lost opportunity for the food industry.
Chandok also believes the FSSAI's own regulations cause confusion by saying food shall be declared unfit if it does not meet labelling standards. Lohani pointed out that many companies, including multinationals, do contract manufacturing in India. If by mistake, a label misses out the name of the manufacturer or the manufacturer does not want to disclose the name, such goods are labelled as "substandard".
"Goods should be marked substandard if they fail a lab test for food safety. The basic parameter should be whether it is safe for human consumption or not," he insists while Lohani suggests there should be a unique number on the label to denote whether the facility producing the product has the licence to produce food or not.
However, Lohani believes that the regulatory system is evolving. "We see a lot of positive measures in the last six months to have a single window operation," he observes citing government reforms designed to reduce from 10 to one the number of government agencies and ministries that have to be contacted for such paperwork.
One issue that is particularly galling for Indian branded food manufacturers and retailers is the gulf between controls they must follow and those imposed on traditional unbranded producers and retailers. The crackdown on Maggi noodles brought into sharp focus the food safety norms, or lack of them, for local roadside foods such as samosas and vada pav, that are fried and refried often in oil of dubious origin in India.
"Traditional Indian snacks are exempt from food safety norms. Nearly 97% of the population consumes it on a daily basis. Safety is important at that level too," Lohani argues.
Gaurav Tandon, head of sales and operations at Epicure Frozen Foods and Beverages Pvt Ltd, aagrees. "We need strong [food safety] law enforcement in the domestic industries as much as in the import industry...what you see on the street is shocking," he tells just-food.

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தடை செய்யப்பட்ட பொருட்கள் விற்பனை எதிரொலி மளிகை கடையில் பல லட்சம் மதிப்பில் போதை பொருட்கள் பறிமுதல் அதிகாரிகள் அதிரடி

சித் தூர், மார்ச் 2:
சித் தூர் மளிகை கடை யில் உணவு பாது காப்பு அதி காரி நடத் திய அதி ரடி சோத னை யில் தடை செய் யப் பட்ட போதை பொருட் கள் பறி மு தல் செய் யப் பட் டது. இது தொ டர் பாக கடை உரி மை யா ள ரி டம் போலீ சார் விசா ரணை நடத்தி வரு கின் ற னர்.
நாடு மு ழு வ தும் குட்கா, பான் ப ராக் உள் ளிட்ட போதை பொருட் கள் விற் ப னைக்கு தடை விதிக் கப் பட் டுள் ளது. தடை மீறி விற் பனை செய் யப் ப டு வது தெரி ய வந் தால் கடும் நட வ டிக்கை எடுக் கப் ப டும் என அறி வு றுத் தப் பட் டுள் ளது.
இந் நி லை யில் சித் தூர் பகு தி யில் உள்ள கடை கள் மற் றும் கிரா மப் பு றங் க ளில் உள்ள கடை க ளில் தடை செய் யப் பட்ட போதை பொருட் கள் விற் பனை செய் யப் ப டு வ தாக போலீ சா ருக்கு தொடர் புகார் கள் வந்த வண் ணம் இருந் தன. மேலும் பள் ளி கள் அரு கில் உள்ள கடை க ளில் போதை பொருட் கள் விற் கப் ப டு வ தா க வும் அத னால் மாண வர் கள் சீர ழிந்து வரு வ தா க வும் புகார் செய் யப் பட் டது.
மேலும் கிரா மப் பு றங் கள் மற் றும் சித் தூர் பகுதி கடை க ளுக்கு சித் தூ ரில் உள்ள ஒரு கடை யில் இருந்து மொத்த விற் ப னை யில் போதை பொருட் கள் விற் கப் ப டு வ தா க வும் தெரி விக் கப் பட் டது.
இதை ய டுத்து உண வுப் பா து காப்பு அதி காரி சீனி வா சலு ரெட்டி, வணி க வ ரித் துறை அதி காரி நவீன் கு மார், முத லா வது காவல் நி லைய சப்-இன்ஸ் பெக் டர் உமா ம கேஷ் வ ர ராவ் மற் றும் போலீ சார் நேற்று சித் தூ ரில் பல் வேறு இடங் க ளில் அதி ரடி சோதனை நடத் தி னர்.
அப் போது சித் தூர் மார்க் கெட் சவுக், சுவாமி ரெட்டி தெரு பகு தி யில் இயங் கி வ ரும் மளிகை கடை க ளுக்கு பொருட் களை மொத்த விற் பனை செய் யும் கடை யில் போதை பொருட் கள் விற் கப் ப டு வ தாக அதி கா ரி க ளுக்கு தக வல் கிடைத் தது. அதன் பே ரில் சம் பந் தப் பட்ட கடை யில் காலை 10 மணிக்கு திடீர் சோதனை நடத் தி னர்.
அப் போது அங்கு தடை செய் யப் பட்ட போதை பெருட் க ளான குட்கா, பான் ப ராக், ஹான்ஸ் உள் ளிட்ட பொருட் கள் மூட்டை மூட் டை யாக அடுக்கி வைக் கப் பட் டி ருந் தது. அங் கி ருந்து மாவட் டத் தின் பல் வேறு பகு தி க ளுக் கும் சப்ளை செய் யப் பட் டது தெரி ய வந் தது.
இதை ய டுத்து கடை உரி மை யா ள ரான அரி யி டம் போலீ சார் விசா ரணை நடத்தி வரு கின் ற னர். சம் பந் தப் பட்ட கடை யில் அதி கா ரி கள் சோதனை நடத்தி போதை பொருட் கள் பறி மு தல் செய் யப் பட்ட சம் ப வம் அப் ப கு தி யில் பெரும் பர ப ரப்பை ஏற் ப டுத் தி யது.
இது கு றித்து உணவு பாது காப்பு அதி காரி சீனி வா சலு ரெட்டி கூறு கை யில், `பொது மக் கள் புகார் செய் த தின் பேரில் இங்கு சோதனை நடத் தப் பட் டது. ேசாத னை யில் பல லட் சம் மதிப் பில் தடை செய் யப் பட்ட போதை பொருட் கள் பறி மு தல் செய் யப் பட் டது. சித் தூர் பகு தி யில் தடை செய் யப் பட்ட பொருட் களை வியா பா ரி கள் விற் பனை செய் யக் கூ டாது. மீறி னால் கடும் நட வ டிக்கை எடுக் கப் ப டும். ஜாமீ னில் வெளி வர முடி யாத வழக் கில் கைது செய்ய நேரி டும். இந்த அதி ரடி சோதனை தொட ரும் ’’ என் றார்.

Fungus found in branded food products, FDA initiates action

Acting on the complaints of fungus being found in two food items — Amul Amrakhand and Britannia Nut and Raisin Romance Cake — sold from two different stores in the city, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials have collected samples of one item and sent them for analysis in the laboratory. The FDA is in the process of collecting samples of the other product for lab analysis.
Tushar Jaiswal and Anjan Chatterjee from the city had found fungus in the Amul Amrakhand and Britannia Cake, respectively, they had bought from two stores. They have filed complaints with the FDA and also mailed the same to TOI about the inferior quality of the two food items.
"We can't level any charges as of now on any manufacturer as the laboratory results are yet to come. However, FDA would not hesitate in conducting investigations on products based on citizens' complaints," said Shivaji Desai, joint commissioner FDA (Food), Nagpur division.
Jaiswal had bought a 200gm pack of Amrakhand and found a patch of green fungi on the upper layer. He called up the customer care number mentioned on the container but got no response. So he wrote a mail to TOI saying that the product still had 30 days before expiry. His mail said that it was disturbing to have fungi in such renowned brands.
Food safety officer (FSO) Pravin Umap, who initiated action in the two cases, toldTOI that he had gone to Purti Super Bazar to collect sample of the Amrakhand on February 15 based on the complaint of Tushar Jaiswal. But the shop had no stock as after the customer's complaint the management had returned all the stock to the distributor Shri Yogiraj Provisions in Laxmi Nagar. "We collected 18 samples of Amul Amrakhand batch number CRF-267/2 from the distributor and sent them for analysis," he said.
In the second case in which Chatterjee lodged a complaint about fungus in Britannia Cake, the FDA couldn't find any stock with Shri Sai Food Shopee in Tilkar Nagar. Based on the bill, distributor Mahavir Agency in Ram Nagar was also searched for the stock, but to no avail. "We have found out that a stockist Tinup Trade Link is based at Nimji in Kalmeshwar taluka. Hence, we have told the rural SP to trace and collect samples," said Umap.
Chatterjee told TOI that he was highly impressed by the FDA officials who attended to his complaint immediately. He particular praised Desai for his promptness. "The packaging date on the cake was January 14 and the wrapper said it was best before use for three months from packaging. Despite this, it is sad that such established brands could also have fungus," he said. 

28 pc packaged drinking water samples fail tests in 2014-15

New Delhi, Mar 1 (PTI) Around 28 per cent samples of packaged drinking and mineral water and about 23 per cent milk samples tested during 2014-15 were found not to be conforming to the prescribed standards, Rajya Sabha was informed today.
"Some instances of sale of mineral water or packaged drinking water not conforming to the standards prescribed under the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSAI), 2006 and Regulations thereunder and unlicensed packaged water, have come to the notice of FSSAI," Union Health Minister J P Nadda said in a written reply.
Out of 2977 and 806 samples tested during 2013-14 and 2014-15 respectively, 577 and 226 were found to be not conforming to the standards prescribed under the FSSAI Act.
"The data on packaged drinking water and mineral water tested was not compiled for 2012-13. The FSSAI regularly sensitises the State Food Safety Commissioners through written communications and in the meetings of its Central Advisory Committee," he said.
Replying to another question on adulterated milk, Nadda said out of 6649 samples analysed in 2014-15, 1559 were found to be not conforming to the prescribed standard under the FSSAI Act.
"The Secretary Department of Health and Family Welfare has requested the Chief Secretaries of all states/UTs to issue instructions to administrative and police authorities to extend all possible cooperation to the food safety authorities in carrying out surveillance activities to check food adulteration and manufacture/sale of sub-standards food item," the minister said.

Use of Radiation Technology in FPI

Government of India has cleared several commodities under new Atomic Energy (Radiation Processing of Food & Allied Products) Rules 2012 in Food Safety and Standards (Food Products Standards and Food Additives) Regulations, 2011 for preservation through irradiation. A major facility in the Government sector catering to irradiation of fresh horticultural produce is the KRUSHAK facility at Lasalgaon, Nashik District, Maharashtra State, India. The facility has been used for irradiating mangoes for export to USA since 2007. Radiation processing plant at Vashi, Navi Mumbai, under the Department of Atomic Energy, has been processing spices and dry ingredients for microbial decontamination since the year 2000. 
With the objective of arresting post-harvest losses of horticulture & non-horticulture produce,Ministry of Food Processing Industries is operating a scheme for Cold Chain, Value Addition and Preservation Infrastructure for grant of financial assistance for setting up inter alia, irradiation facilities by individuals or group of entrepreneurs, cooperative societies, Self Help Group etc. 
The energy involved in irradiation is not strong enough to cause changes at the atomic level, and since the food is never in contact with a radioactive source, the food cannot become radioactive. Several extensive reviews of toxicological data by regulatory and health organizations, have determined that food irradiated at doses below 10 kGy is safe. In fact, food is safer after being irradiated because the process destroys harmful bacteria that may be present. Numerous published research studies have tried to identify problems resulting from eating irradiated foods but failed to disclose any health risks. Several of these studies were long term, multi-generation feeding studies, involving several species of test animals. A joint study group of FAO/IAEA/WHO in 1997 evaluated data on wholesomeness of food irradiated with doses above 10 kGy and recommended that food irradiated with any dose to achieve technical objectives is safe and nutritionally adequate. No upper limit, therefore, needs to be imposed as long as food is irradiated based on prevailing good manufacturing practices. 
Among the legislations that govern food irradiation in the country, The Atomic Energy (Control of Irradiation of Food) Rules 1991, the primary legislation that regulates food irradiation was amended and the notification issued recently in June 2012. A generic class-based approval has been approved for increasing the product range for radiation processing. It will provide year long availability of feedstock for irradiation plants and improve their economic viability. Irradiation of food is also governed under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 and the Regulations issued thereunder. 
This information was given by the Minister of State for Food Processing Industries Sadhvi Niranjan Jyoti in a written reply in Lok Sabha today.

Rules made easy for non-standardised food industry: Harsimrat

Union Food Processing Industries Minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal today announced that the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India(FSSAI) had approved more than 8000 new additives harmonised with international codex standards which would provide considerable relief to the industry.
While thanking Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley for approving and announcing the policy of 100 per cent FDI in marketing of food products produced and manufactured in India in the General Budget, Ms Badal said she had taken up the difficulties faced by the industry with the FSSAI .
The Authority had now notified an amendment to the regulations as a result of which non-standardised food products called proprietary foods (except novel food and nutraceuticals) that use ingredients and additives approved in the regulations would no longer require product approval.

Consider selling healthy food in canteens, DoE tells schools

All heads of schools have been urged to create awareness among students about unhealthy eating habits, and consider banning sale of food items that are high in fat, sugar and salt content from their canteens.
In order to create awareness among students about unhealthy eating habits, the Delhi government has directed schools in the Capital to consider banning sale of food items that are high in fat, sugar and salt content from their canteens.
The Directorate of Education (DoE) on Monday issued a circular in this regard to all private unaided and government schools.
“All the heads of government and private schools are directed to sensitise the students and parents about ill-effects of food high in fat, sugar and salt through morning assembly, teacher interactive period and parent- teacher meetings,” the DoE said in the circular.
“The schools may also consider banning the sale of such foods from the school canteen. Also, ensure that the cafeteria sells fresh and healthy foods that are low in fat.”
The government circular also details the adverse effects of each of the constituents of food high in fat, sugar and salt, as prescribed by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Some of the suggestions by the government for sensitising the students include “maintaining a notice board for creating awareness; organising drawing, painting, slogan writing activities and debates in a class-wise manner with special emphasis on lower classes; and dedicating morning assembly once in a month for this purpose”.
“Spread the word about healthy food options like vegetable sandwiches, fruits, paneer cutlets, khandvi, poha and low-fat milkshakes with seasonal fruits, lassi and jaljeera, etc.,” the DoE circular said.
The communication comes following a Delhi High Court judgment ordering regulation of junk food consumption among school children through restrictions on sale of foods high in fat, salt and sugar — like chips, fried foods and sugar-sweetened beverages — in and around school premises.
The Court had also directed the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India to implement its guidelines on making wholesome and nutritious food available to school children.