Jul 20, 2015

B P Sharma given additional charge as FSSAI chairperson

Health and Family Welfare Secretary Bhanu Pratap Sharma was today given additional charge of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), Chairperson, for three months. 
Sharma, a 1981 batch IAS officer of Bihar cadre, will hold the additional charge for three months beyond July 3 or till the appointment of a regular incumbent, an order issued by the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) said.

FSSAI to soon issue draft notification for liquor standards

The safety watchdog plans to set standards for alcoholic drinks including beer, whisky and rum among others
The proposal has been made in the Safety and Standards (Food Recall Procedure) Regulations, 2015, which has been put up for public comments. 
New Delhi: With plans to set standards for alcoholic drinks including beer, whisky and rum among others central food safety watchdog Food Safety Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is likely to come out with a draft notification within a few weeks.
“The Food Safety Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) will come up with a draft notification on the standards of alcoholic beverages in next 45 days,” a source said. It was decided that once standards for alcohol and alcoholic beverages were finalised it shall be intimated to all states and UTs so that they may suitably advise the respective excise departments, the source added.
“Work is going on to prepare standards for alcohol and alcoholic beverages, broadly under two different heads, one for drinks with less alcohol like beer and other for drinks having major alcohol content like whisky,” the source said.
Among other drinks vodka, brandy and gin will also come under the proposed standards. Earlier this year, a meeting of the Central Advisory Committee had discussed having standards for alcohol and alcoholic beverages. FSSAI has already proposed that alcoholic beverages, pan masala and supari may not be treated as “unsafe food” for recall just because they carry a mandatory warning on their covers.
The proposal has been made in the Safety and Standards (Food Recall Procedure) Regulations, 2015, which has been put up for public comments. These draft norms were put up for public comments on 29 May and the deadline ends on 1 August.
FSSAI is the central body which lays down science-based standards for articles of food and regulate their sale, manufacturing, storage, distribution and import to ensure availability of safe and wholesome food for human consumption.

FSSAI mulls self-regulatory framework for packaged food products; may ask to mention expiry dates

Part of a stricter regime on food safety in the wake of the ban on Maggi noodles by the FSSAI in June, companies currently suggest a ‘best before’ date. 
NEW DELHI: Packaged food companies in India may soon have to be more explicit about theshelf life of their products with the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) considering a plan to make it mandatory for manufacturers to print expiry dates on packs, said a top official of the apex regulator. 
Part of a stricter regime on food safety in the wake of the ban on Maggi noodles by the FSSAIin June, companies currently suggest a 'best before' date. That's not enough, said the official, who didn't want to be named. 
He also called on the industry and lobby groups that represent companies to move toward a self-regulatory framework similar to the one that the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India has for its profession. There would then be no need for the FSSAI to intervene to the current extent, he said. The FSSAI has come under attack from the government and the industry for choking the sector. 
Food processing minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal told ET in an interview earlier this month that an "inspector raj" had spread fear among companies and was stalling innovation and investment. Applications for product approval are on hold because companies, including global companies, either don't provide data on shelf-life stability or make incorrect ingredient claims, said the regulatory official. 
"The 'best before' date on the label indicates diminished nutritive value of the food product, which is still safe for consumption. However, for how long will it stay safe to consume after the 'best-before date' is not known," the official said. "By clearly stating the expiry date on the label, the safety of the consumer will be taken care of as the 'best before' date will always precede the expiry date. The 'best before' date can then be made optional." 
The regulator will deal with pending applications for approval in three more technical officers to the screening committee that examines these, the person said. The committee is also meeting more frequently than before to clear the backlog. The regulatory official said the primary reason for the rejection of product approval applications was the absence of scientific data from companies, including MNCs. 
"When a company is filing an application for product approval, one assumes that they are duly assisted by food experts and the product has gone through a scientific process of testing. However, many companies fail to give the shelf-life stability data sheet, which is mandatory," he said. 
Shelf life refers to the duration for which a product and its ingredients are safe for consumption under varying temperature and humidity conditions over a period of time. At the time of development, shelf-life stability is determined through a real-time study or an accelerated process. 
"If someone claims their product is good for, say, 18 months, unless you give me a shelf-life stability data sheet to prove this, how can it be approved?" said the official. 
"Some companies simply write that the shelf life of my product is so much without the data sheet." Another reason for rejection of applications is claims made on labels. One breakfast cereal was said to contain oats and honey as the main ingredients. It was then found that they made up less than 10% of the content, said the official. 
Another health drink claimed to contain almonds and pistachios. It did but in a tiny percentage. Chocolates are another area of disagreement. Vegetable oil is not permitted as an ingredient in chocolates, in line with similar restrictions in Swiss or Belgian standards. 
Yet most 'chocolate' sold in the Indian market contains vegetable oil, ranging from 5% to 35%, so much so that some brands avoid using the word 'chocolate' on the packaging. A leading multinational brand, which uses milk solids and cocoa butter in its home market, once tried to export chocolate to India with 5% vegetable oil, he recalled. 
He said there was great scope for consumer education and the FSSAI is willing to work with industry in this regard on everything from overages (in excess of normal levels) of nutrients in foods to the safety of flavour enhancer MSG for all save children below 1 year and those with specific allergies. Companies shouldn't adopt double standards when it comes to the Indian market simply because awareness about labelling and food safety is low. 
"As long as companies treat Indian consumers at par with those in Europe or America the authority is ready to work towards resolving issues," he said. "However, they cannot strengthen the bottom line in their balance sheet at the cost of the Indian consumers."
ET View 
Cooperate Towards Safe Food 
Transitions tend to be fraught. It was but natural that India's unregulated food industry should experience some friction while moving to a regulated regime. The point is for the industry and the regulator to work together and avoid confrontation. 
The industry will have to learn to be transparent about what its offering contains and will have to learn to follow the due process while applying for approval of new foods. The regulator, on its part, will have to learn to extend its approval fast. 
The suggestion for the industry to create a self-regulatory body that will offer the first check is sound and merits attention. Consumer awareness and education must receive the attention of both the industry and the regulator, jointly and separately, so that needless scares such as over MSG, cease to be hurdles.

Colour of Food

Social evils flourish when people in general are not adequately conscious of the harmful potential of such practices. In our country, food adulteration has assumed such a menacing proportion that it is perhaps uppermost among the social evils of our time, which like other deep-rooted ones can hardly be eradicated or effectively checked by mere statutory measures without the awakening of mass awareness and continued vigilance. Around 30 per cent to 40 per cent of food articles sold in markets are adulterated. From perishable vegetables to foodgrains, edible oils/fats to milk and milk products, sugar and sugar based confectionery to fruit juices and soft drinks, baby food to spices - almost every item is adulterated before being sold in the market. Consumption of adulterated food is extremely harmful in terms of nutrition. It can cause permanent infirmities and sometimes even death. Indeed, the nation's health is in grave peril due to food adulteration.
Adulterants are foreign substances. In terms of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 (FSSA, 2006) an 'adulterant' is any matter which is or could be used for making the food unsafe or substandard or mis-branded or containing extraneous matter. The consumers' acceptance of any food article is in general guided by its three essential attributes - wholesomeness (to ensure nutrition and pleasure of food), safety, and consumers' preference (to ensure money's worth). In terms of such attributes a food is called adulterated if its quality is diluted or adversely affected by the addition of even innocuous or health hazard substances, or by the abstraction of the nutritious portion. Or if the food in question is not natural in quality. Food adulteration takes into account not only the deliberate addition or subtraction or abstraction of substances but also their incidental contamination during the period of growth, harvesting, storage, processing, transport and distribution.
Adulteration of food occurs in different forms. 'Frank' adulteration, so-called, is intended to increase the bulk and weight by adding foreign materials such as stone chips, sand particles, dirt etc. Such types of adulteration are generally found in cereals like rice, wheat, pulses etc. In another type, adulterants are indistinguishable from food materials, specifically the addition of chalk or soapstone materials or of non-casein proteins in casein and milk products. The most common type is the addition of chemicals, synthetic or natural, to add to the colour, flavour, texture and general appearance so that it primarily satisfies the organoleptic (sensory) quality and secondarily the nutritive quality. Many of the chemicals added are prohibited by food laws and are potentially dangerous to the health of consumers. Markets are flooded with vegetables, fruit, fish, meat, poultry, and sweets, and processed food, indeed essential items to which colour has been added. Farmers and unscrupulous traders adulterate their produce or merchandise with harmful adherents to increase profits... regardless of the danger to human life.
Both nutrients and hazardous adulterants consumed with food articles enter and are transported to different parts of the anatomy. While some adulterants pass through the gastrointestinal tract unabsorbed, some are digested by enzymes or broken down by bacteria. However, the "transport", transformation, utilisation and accumulation processes that are involved while addressing a poison within a tissue or organ of the body are dependent on time. If small amounts are consumed regularly, the concentration will build up to a steady level in most tissues and organs over a certain period of time. So-called "fat soluble" compounds like DDT or PBB (Polybrominated biphenyls) are not only stored in the adipose tissues but also pass into the milk fat of lactating women. Lead is also an accumulative poison like mercury and cadmium. Once it is absorbed, it tends to accumulate in the body.
Mineral oil added to edible oils and fats cause cancer. Lead chromate added to turmeric powder and spices can cause lead poisoning - foot-drop, insomnia, constipation, anaemia and mental retardation. Mercury in mercury fungicides used to treat grains or mercury contaminated fish can cause brain damage, paralysis and death. Non-permitted coal-tar dyes like metanil yellow, sudan II and III, congo red etc. can cause allergies, liver damage, infertility, anaemia, cancer and birth defects. There are many other food adulterants with poisonous effects on health.
Consumers have the right to food safety. Mere awareness is not enough. Without consumers knowing what adulterants are, food safety will remain a half-baked idea. They can now detect adulteration on their own by using common chemicals at hand. Such tests can help them immensely to prevent consumption of adulterated foods. "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." - Benjamin Franklin.
Colour contributes substantially to the appeal of food. Consumers often judge the freshness and quality of foodstuff by their colour. The colour which has been found to be the most popular with the trade is non-permitted metanil yellow, a coal-tar dye. Almost all brightly coloured and highly polished pulses, sweets (laddoos, jalebis), sharbat, turmeric (whole and powdered), biryani, etc. have been found to be adulterated with this prohibited dye. If a magenta red colour develops on the addition of a few drops of hydrochloric acid (muriatic acid) to the sample of sweets, biriyani or sharbat, it can be deduced that the sample contains metanil yellow.
Checking for extraneous colouring agents in turmeric or chilli powder is far simpler: Sprinkle a small quantity of the spice sample into a glass of water. Artificial colorant imparts any colour to the water or descends as coloured streaks. Similarly chicory used to adulterate coffee powder can be detected by gently sprinkling coffee powder sample in a glass of water. The coffee floats over the water but chicory begins to sink down within a few seconds leaving behind them a trail of colour, due to a large amount of caramel. Water soluble artificial colour in chillies or turmeric powder can be detected by sprinkling a small quantity of sample on the surface of water contained in a glass tumbler. The water soluble colour will immediately start descending in colour streaks.
If effervescence is observed after adding a few drops of diluted hydrochloric acid on the sample of jaggery, it can be inferred that either washing soda or sodium bicarbonate or both have been mixed with jaggery.
It is common knowledge that Bengal gram, arhar and besan ( Bengal gram flour) are often adulterated by using khesari (lathyrus sativus), a kind of pulse that contains BOAA (Beta-N-Oxalyl Amino -L Alanine) that causes neuro lathyrism which can lead to paralysis of the limb. Its presence can be detected by a simple test. A small sample can be taken in a test tube and placed in simmering water. Appearance of pink coloration suggests that the sample contains khesari. Metanil yellow, a prohibited coal tar dye, if present will give a similar colour even without simmering.
Starch used to adulterate milk, curd, khoya, paneer, sweets can be easily detected by using tincture iodine - Boil the foodstuff, cool and add a few drops of tincture iodine. The blue colour indicates the presence of starch. Common salt is deceptively sold as iodised salt. This misbranding can be revealed by a simple test: Cut a piece of potato, add the sample of salt and wait a minute and add two drops of lemon juice. If iodised, it will have a blue colour. In case of common salt, there will be no blue colour. Sugar solution used to adulterate honey can easily be identified: A cotton wick dipped in pure honey, when lit, burns readily. If adulterated, the presence of water will not allow the honey to burn; if it does it will produce a cracking sound.
The problem of adulteration of oils and fats is rampant in the country. More than 60 per cent of unsealed edible oil sold in the market is adulterated. Petroleum oils are very much cheaper than any edible oil and petroleum fractions, especially the oil used in cars.
'தமிழகத்தில் உற்பத்தியாகும் காய்கறிகளில் நச்சுத்தன்மை இல்லை' என, தமிழக அரசு விளக்கம் அளித்தும், கேரளா மீண்டும் முரண்டு பிடிக்கிறது. காய்கறிகளின் பரிசோதனை அறிக்கையுடன் வரும்படி, டிரைவர்களுக்கு அம்மாநில அதிகாரிகள் எச்சரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளதால், வியாபாரிகள் அதிர்ச்சி அடைந்துள்ளனர்.
தமிழகத்தில் ஆண்டுதோறும், 2.28 கோடி டன் காய்கறிகளும், இரண்டு கோடி டன் பழங்களும் உற்பத்தியாகின்றன. திண்டுக்கல், நீலகிரி மற்றும் கோவை மாவட்டங்களில் உற்பத்தியாகும், முட்டைகோஸ், கேரட், பீட்ரூட், உருளைக்கிழங்கு உள்ளிட்ட காய்கறிகள், தினமும், 200 லாரிகளில் கேரளாவுக்கு அனுப்பப்படுகின்றன. 
நச்சுத்தன்மை:
தமிழகத்தில் இருந்து செல்லும் இந்தக் காய்கறிகளில், உடலுக்கு பாதிப்பை ஏற்படுத்தும் நச்சுத்தன்மை இருப்பதாக புகார் எழுந்துள்ளது. இதுகுறித்து, அம்மாநில அரசு, தமிழக அரசிடம் விளக்கம் கேட்டது. அதற்கு, 'கேரளாவுக்கு அனுப்பப்படும் காய்கறிகளில் நச்சுத்தன்மை இல்லை' என, தமிழக அரசு விளக்கம் அளித்துஉள்ளது.
இதுகுறித்து, தமிழக தோட்டக்கலைத்துறை அதிகாரி ஒருவர் கூறியதாவது:தமிழக காய்கறிகளில் நச்சுத்தன்மை இருப்பதை, ஆய்வுகள் மூலம் உறுதி செய்ததாக கேரள அதிகாரிகள் கூறினர். ஆனால், ஆய்வு எங்கு நடந்தது, அதன் முடிவு என்ன என்ற விவரத்தை தெரிவிக்கவில்லை. அதேநேரத்தில், இந்த விவகாரம் தொடர்பாக விளக்கம் கோரி, தமிழகத்திற்கு, கேரள அரசு கடிதம் அனுப்பியது. உடன், தமிழக அரசு உத்தரவுப்படி, காய்கறிகளில் நச்சுத்தன்மை குறித்து, தோட்டக்கலைத்துறை 
மூலம் ஆய்வு நடந்தது.அதில், உடலுக்கு பாதிப்பு ஏற்படுத்தும் நச்சுத்தன்மை ஏதும் இல்லை; அனுமதிக்கப்பட்ட அளவுக்குள் பூச்சிக்கொல்லிகள் இருப்பது தெரியவந்தது. இதுபற்றிய விவரம், கேரள அரசுக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டுள்ளது. ஆனாலும், இதைஏற்க மறுக்கும் கேரள அரசியல்வாதிகள், ஏதோ காரணத்தால், தொடர்ந்து பிரச்னை செய்து வருகின்றனர்.இவ்வாறு, அவர் கூறினார்.
ஆய்வகங்களில்... :
இந்நிலையில், 'தமிழகத்தில் இருந்து கேரளாவுக்கு காய்கறிகளை ஏற்றி வந்தால், அத்துடன், காய்கறிகளில் நச்சுத்தன்மை இல்லை என்பதற்கான,தமிழக ஆய்வகங்களில் பரிசோதனை செய்ததற்கான அறிக்கையையும் கொண்டு வர வேண்டும்' என, லாரி டிரைவர்களுக்கு, கேரள அதிகாரிகள் எச்சரிக்கை விடுத்து உள்ளனர். 
அதிர்ச்சி :
இதுதொடர்பாக, காய்கறிகளை ஏற்றிச் செல்லும் லாரி டிரைவர்கள் கூறியதாவது: குமுளி, கம்பம்மெட்டு மற்றும் போடிமெட்டு சோதனைச் சாவடிகளில் உள்ள அதிகாரிகள், 'இனி காய்கறிகளை கொண்டு வரும்போது ஆய்வக அறிக்கையுடன் வர வேண்டும். ஒரு வாரத்திற்குள் அதற்கான ஏற்பாடுகளை செய்து கொள்ளுங்கள். ஆய்வக அறிக்கை இல்லாமல் வரும் காய்கறிகளை அனுமதிக்க மாட்டோம்' என, கூறுகின்றனர். இவ்வாறு, அவர்கள் தெரிவித்தனர். 
கேரள மாநில சோதனைச் சாவடிகளில், 'மொபைல்' ஆய்வகங்கள் அமைக்கப் போவதாக முன்னர் கூறிய கேரள அரசு, தற்போது, 'நீங்களே பரிசோதனை செய்து அறிக்கையுடன் வர வேண்டும்' என, முன்னுக்குப்பின் முரணாக கூறியிருப்பது, காய்கறி வியாபாரிகளை அதிர்ச்சிஅடைய வைத்துள்ளது. கேரள அரசு, மீண்டும் முரண்டு பிடிக்கத் துவங்கியுள்ளதால், இதுபற்றிய விரிவான விவரங்களை மத்திய அரசுக்கு அனுப்ப, தமிழக அரசு திட்டமிட்டு உள்ளது.

Vegetables are safe to consume

Pesticide residues within limits in Tamil Nadu: report
Rejecting the allegations of the Kerala government that vegetables supplied from Tamil Nadu have high level of pesticides residue, the Agriculture Department has data to prove that 96 per cent of samples were free of pesticide residue.
According to an analytical report prepared by the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University, only two vegetable samples — bhendi and bitterguard — have pesticide residue level exceeding the Maximum Residue Limit (MRL), set by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) and the CODEX (European Union Standards).
All the fruits — grape, mango, banana, guava and fig —were free from pesticides residue. For the current year, the analysis of 117 vegetables and fruits was completed by Pesticide Toxicology Laboratory of the Agricultural University on June 15.
The samples were processed through standardised multi-residue method approved by the National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories (NABL).
The detection and quantification was done for 45 pesticides by Gas Chromatograph (GC) with confirmation in Gas Chromatograph—Mass Spectrometer (GCMS) as per the food safety requirement. Pesticides banned in Kerala, but used in Tamil Nadu were not considered. But pesticides banned as per Central Insecticides Board & Registration Committee are already restricted for marketing in Tamil Nadu, sources said.
“In five (4.1 per cent) vegetables — bhendi (4) and bitterguard (1), the residue level exceeded the permissible level. The remaining 96 per cent of the samples were free of pesticides residue,” the report said.
A senior official of the Agriculture Department said inspection in 4,800 retail pesticides shops found no banned pesticides.
Awareness campaign
To create awareness of judicious use of pesticides, the department has launched ‘Grow safe food campaign’ on five essential principles. The message of application of pesticides on the right crop, at the right time in approved doses and as per approved methods against pests for which pesticides have been approved is being conveyed to farmers and other stakeholders.

Ice-Cream, Flavoured Milk Under Food Safety Regulator's Lens; New Norms for Milk

NEW DELHI: Food safety watchdog FSSAI is planning to set new quality standards for ice-cream and flavoured milk besides tightening the existing safety norms for milk and other dairy products.
The proposal comes after ban on import of Chinese milk and milk products last month due to presence of melamine for one year till June, 2016, following a recommendation from FSSAI.
At present, Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has norms for milk, paneer, ghee and butter, among others.
In the latest proposal, the regulator is working on setting more specific and stringent standards for fat content in milk.
"... there is need to further broaden the quality standards for milk and its products. We are working on that and it is likely that in next one month, will come up with draft of these standards," a source said.
The source further said that the authority is working on comprehensive norms for milk and milk products which will now also include ice-cream and flavoured milk, among others.
At present, FSSAI has ceiling on presence of insecticides and metal contaminants in milk and milk products.
Last month, the regulator had imposed limits for melamine in domestic milk products.
Melamine is used in plastic and fertiliser industry.
The regulator has stepped surveillance on processed food items after the Maggi controversy. It is reviewing safety standards and holding several consultations with stakeholders to strengthen it.
It had also asked states to increase surveillance and act against entities selling contaminated packaged drinking water as well as adulterated milk and edible oils.
Earlier this year, in a meeting with state food safety commissioners, the FSSAI CEO had shared concerns raised by the Parliamentary Panel on Consumer Affairs regarding widespread incidences of milk adulteration.
The food safety watchdog has also formed an 11-member panel for regulating salt, sugar and fat in food products sold or served at eating joints in the country.
On June 5, FSSAI had banned Nestle's Maggi, saying it was 'unsafe and hazardous' after tests found presence of lead and Monosodium glutamate above permissible limits.
While Nestle India had withdrawn the instant noodles brand from the market, it challenged the FSSAI order in Bombay High Court.

After Maggi mess, FSSAI plans new quality standards for ice cream, flavoured milk

The proposal comes after ban on import of Chinese milk and milk products last month due to presence of melamine for one year till June 2016 following a recommendation from the FSSAI.
The FSSAI is working on comprehensive norms for milk and milk products which will now also include ice cream and flavoured milk.
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is planning to set new quality standards for ice cream and flavoured milk besides tightening safety norms for milk and other dairy products.
The proposal comes after ban on import of Chinese milk and milk products last month due to presence of melamine for one year till June 2016 following a recommendation from the FSSAI.
The FSSAI has norms for milk, paneer, ghee and butter among others.
"In the latest proposal, the regulator is working on setting more specific and stringent standards for fat content in milk. ... there is need to further broaden the quality standards for milk and its products. We are working on that and it is likely that in next one month will come up with draft of these standards," a source said. The authority is working on comprehensive norms for milk and milk products which will now also include ice cream and flavoured milk, among others, the source added.
Currently, the FSSAI has ceiling on presence of insecticides and metal contaminants in milk and milk products.
Last month, the regulator had imposed limits for melamine in domestic milk products.
Melamine is used in plastic and fertiliser industry. The regulator has stepped surveillance on processed food items after the Maggi controversy. It is reviewing safety standards and holding several consultations with stakeholders to strengthen it. It had also asked states to increase surveillance and act against entities selling contaminated packaged drinking water as well as adulterated milk and edible oils.
Earlier this year, in a meeting with state food safety commissioners, the FSSAI chief executive officer had shared concerns raised by the Parliamentary Panel on Consumer Affairs regarding widespread incidences of milk adulteration.
The food safety watchdog has also formed an 11-member panel for regulating salt, sugar and fat in food products sold or served at eating joints in the country.

ஐஸ் கி ரீம், நறு மண பால் தரத் துக்கு வரப் போ கி றது புதிய கெடு பி டி கள் மேகியை அடுத்து தொட ரும் கண் கா ணிப்பு தர நிர் ணய ஆணை யம் தீவி ரம்

புது டெல்லி, ஜூலை 20:
ஐஸ் கி ரீம், நறு மண பால் தரத் துக்கு புதிய கெடு பிடி கட்டுப் பா டு களை கொண் டு வ ர வும், இவற்றை கண் கா ணிக் க வும் இந் திய உணவு பாது காப்பு தர நிர் ணய ஆணை யம் முடிவு செய் துள் ளது.
மேகி நூடுல்சை தொடர்ந்து உணவு தர கட்டுப் பாடு விதி க ள் கடு மை யாக் கப் பட்டு வரு கின் றன. இதை ய டுத்து இந் திய உணவு பாது காப்பு தர நிர் ணய ஆணை யம் சர் வ தேச அள வில் உண வின் தரத்தை நிலைப் ப டுத்த கோடெக்ஸ் அமைப்பு வகுத் துள்ள விதி களை 12,000 தர விதி களை தற் போது உரு வாக் கி யுள் ளது. இது போல் ஓட்டல் கள், பாக் கெட் உண வு கள் ஆகி ய வை யும் இந்த ஆணை யத் தின் கண் கா ணிப்பு வளை யத் துக் குள் வந் துள் ளன. மது பான வகை களின் தர நிலை க ளை யும், பாது காப் பை யும் சோத னைக்கு உட் ப டுத் தும் வரைவு அறிக் கை யை யும் இது உரு வாக் கு கி றது. இதை தொ டர்ந்து ஐஸ் கி ரீம் மற் றும் நறு மண பால் ஆகி ய வற் றை யும் தனது கண் கா ணிப்பு வளை யத் துக் குள் இந் திய உணவு பாது காப்பு தர நிர் ணய ஆணை யம் கொண்டு வரு கி றது.
உரம், பிளாஸ் டிக் கில் கலக் கப் ப டும் ‘மெல மைன்’ எனும் நச் சுப் பொ ருள் சீனா வின் பால், சாக் லேட்டு களில் கலந் தி ருப் பதை கடந்த 2008-ல் உண வுப் பா து காப்பு ஆணை யம் கண் டு பி டித் தது. அப் போ தி லி ருந்து ஒவ் வோர் ஆண் டும் சீன சாக் லேட்டு களுக்கு தடை வி திக் கப் பட்டு வரு கி றது. கடந்த ஆண்டு விதித் தி ருந்த தடை கடந்த ஜூன் 23ம் தேதி யோடு முடிந்த நிலை யில் மேலும் ஓராண்டு நீட்டிக்க அர சுக்கு உண வு பா து காப்பு அமைப்பு பரிந் துரை செய் துள் ளது. இதை தொடர்ந்து பால் பொருட் களுக் கான விதி கள் கடு மை யா கின் றன. பால், பன் னீர், நெய், வெண் ணெய் ஆ கி ய வற் றுக்கு ஏற் கெ னவே தர விதி கள் வகுக் கப் பட்டுள் ளன. தற் போது இதில் உள்ள கொழுப்பு அள வு களுக் கும் தர கட்டுப் பாட்டை உணவு பாது காப்பு ஆணை யம் கொண்டு வரு கி றது.
‘‘பால் மற் றும் இது சார்ந்த பொருட் களின் தரத்தை அதி க ரிக் கும் வகை யில் புதிய முயற் சி களை எடுத்து வரு கி றோம். எனவே புதிய விதி கள் இறுதி செய் யப் பட்டு, இன் னும் ஒரு மாதத் தில் அவை கொண் டு வ ரப் பட உள் ளன. தற் போது இதற் கான வரைவு அறிக்கை உரு வாக் கப் பட்டு வரு கி றது என உணவு பாது காப்பு ஆணைய வட்டா ரங் கள் தெரி வித் துள் ளன.
உடல் பரு ம னுக்கு கார ண மா கும் நொறுக் குத் தீ னி களில் சேர்க் கப் ப டும் கொழுப்பு அளவு குறித்து ஆராய டாக் டர் கள், உணவு கட்டுப் பாட்டு நிபு ணர் கள் அடங் கிய 11 உறுப் பி னர் கள் கொண்ட குழு அமைப் ப தாக உணவு பாது காப்பு ஆணை யம் ஏற் கெ னவே தெரி வித் தி ருந் தது குறிப் பி டத் தக் கது.

DINAMALAR NEWS


FSSAI to tighten safety norms for dairy products


Two kids seriously ill after eating prasad

Guwahati: Seventeen people, including five children, who fell ill after consuming adulterated gram and mung beans at a religious ceremony on Wednesday were admitted to the Guwahati Medical College Hospital (GMCH) and a private hospital here on Sunday.
The condition of two children was said to be serious. They have been moved to the ICU facility at GMCH. The samples of the adulterated items have been collected by the food safety department for further tests and analysis.
The religious ceremony was held at a community temple in Amiyo Nagar locality of the city on July 15.
A few hours after consuming the adulterated religious offering, devotees began to complain of nausea, abdominal pain, vomiting and diarrhoea. Local residents said the affected took medicine but even four days later, the conditions persisted.
"We are investigating the incident. Meanwhile, samples of the adulterated offerings have been collected by the food safety department and are being tested at their laboratory. The patients were admitted on Sunday after their condition worsened," said Ganesh Saikia, joint director (health) Kamrup (Metro) district.
Incidents such as this are common and health experts said people usually tend to ignore the hygiene norms required to be followed during ceremonies held on a mass scale. In March, more than 500 people including women and children fell sick after consuming adulterated prasad at a religious ceremony held in Barpeta district. The prasad claimed three lives including that of a 10-year-old girl.
The shops in the district from where the gram, mung beans and other items were purchased for the ceremony were raided and the remaining portions of the supplies seized by the administration.

FDA, Maharashtra, collects samples of Haldiram’s products; results soon


Mumbai
Following repeated rejection of imports of Haldiram’s snacks by US FDA (United States Food and Drugs Administration), the Food and Drugs Administration (FDA), Maharashtra, has undertaken the task of carrying out inspections of the products by seeking samples from the markets in Nagpur and Mumbai.
Giving details on the inspections to FnB News over the telephone, Motiram Chapla Pawar, assistant commissioner, FDA, Nagpur, stated, “The sweets and snacks categories of Haldiram’s are under inspection and the results will be out in 25-30 days.”
US FDA is said to have rejected the products for reasons such as presence of high levels of pesticides, mould and bacteria salmonella.
Pawar added that there were many products, which were under regular inspection and Haldiram’s was one of them.
Elaborating further, Harshdeep S Kamble, commissioner, FDA, Mumbai, stated, “Packaged food products of Haldiram’s are under inspection and the results will be out in next 4-6 days, which will decide what action will be taken or may not be taken. This is a regular inspection to derive whether there is any adulteration pertaining to metals etc. The inspections which are undertaken are in the context of FDA and are not under the guidelines of US FDA. Every manufacturer has to undergo inspections.” 
Interestingly, since September 2014, Haldiram's products have been rejected 86 times. Yet, the group claims that its products are safe and reiterates that the issue has been triggered due to the differences in the policies of Indian authorities and US FDA. The US FDA, meanwhile, insisted that presence of salmonella, a bacteria, in the rejected products was one of the reasons for blocking Haldiram's shipments.

Study finds mercury, lead in fish from Ennore creek




Chennai
The seafood you eat could have toxic elements like mercury , arsenic, lead and cadmium, a study has found. Such heavy metals pose health threats that include cancer, lung infection and failure of kidneys and other organs.
A study by Aquaculture Foundation of India and three institutions including Anna University have found concentration of heavy metals in the water and marine organisms in and around Ennore creek due to pollution from industries and domestic sources.
The study , published last year, examined the level of eight metals in the water and in five species that are eaten.The concentration was compared to that of permissible limits prescribed by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), an agency of the United Nations and the World Health Organisation.
After finding the levels to be high, the consortium initiated another round of investigation to take a closer look at nickel content in seafood.
Species like green mussel and tiger bass were found to have high concentration of mercury . Asian tiger shrimp was found to have up to 0.9 units of mercury as against the safe limit of 0.5 units.While the vastly consumed flathead grey mullet (`mada vai' or `kayal meen') and Indian oyster had levels close to the prescribed limits. The study points out that the liver and kidney of fish and shellfish tend to concentrate environmental mercury .
“Marine organisms possess a capacity to turn inorganic mercury into organic compounds, thus rendering mercury more easily transferable throughout the aquatic food chain,“ the study says. Earlier studies have also shown that fish consumption may constitute an important sources of mer cury exposure for health.
All the five species of Asian tiger shrimp, green mussel, Indian oyster, mullet and tiger bass had high cadmium concentration; shrimp had the highest level of 19.25 units (microgram per gram) against the permissible limit of 0.05 to 5.5. The study shows that bivalves accumulated higher proportions of copper, chromium, nick el and arsenic in Ennore creek than shrimp, grey mullet and tiger bass.
Aquaculture Foundation of India scientist M Jaikumar said the concentration of heavy metal deposits are high around the railway bridge at Ennore creek. “Heavy metals get deposited in the river because of lack of proper dredging. The mouth of the estuary is dredged to about five metres, while the depth near the railway bridge is only about 1.5m,“ he said. “Dredging has to be done up to 5m, and to a length of about 5km.“
Jaikumar said they are now studying nickel bioaccumulation in tissues of four marine species: Mullet, crab, oyster and polychetae, a worm used as a feed in shrimp hatcheries.
National Institute of Ocean Technology has also conducted studies at Ennore creek that showed the biochemical oxygen demand and fecal coliform levels are beyond the assimilative capacity of the water body . “It was found during the comprehensive field study that the biggest contributor was untreated municipal sewage from Buckingham Canal,“ said an NIOT scientist.