May 29, 2013

Nagpur scientist selected on national panel for food standards development


NAGPUR: Sugandha Garway, the director of ANACON Laboratories Pvt Ltd from city has been selected as one of the members of the national panel of food standards harmonisation/development process. 
"We are expected to frame food safety standards and submit it to the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) by July 31 this year. I have been working in the field of food standards for long. But being on national panel is a matter of real pride."
FSSAI was established under Section 4 of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 with the mandate of laying down science based standards for articles of food and to regulate their manufacture, storage, distribution, sale and import to ensure availability of safe and wholesome food for human consumption. 
While developing these standards, it is proposed to cover products where we have domestic standards under Food Safety Standards Rules (FSSR) but these need a revision/harmonization with those of the 'codex' and other international best practices. 
The Act aims to make food safety a national movement. To meet this target, FSSAI is using an inclusive approach by utilising the wisdom of all stakeholders in the country, ensuring all relevant issues are discussed through a transparent consultative process and conflicting opinions reconciled on the basis of scientific evidence. 
Garway will be working as a team member for standardization of concentrates (liquid or solid) for water-based flavoured drinks or water based-drinks, which include powder, syrup, liquid and frozen concentrates for the preparation of carbonated or non-carbonated water-based non-alcoholic beverages by addition of water or carbonated water. Such as fountain syrups (e.g., cola syrup), fruit syrups for soft drinks, powdered glucose/sucrose based beverages, powdered isotonic beverages, frozen or powdered concentrate for lemonade, iced tea mixes, fruit-based drinks, water-based flavoured drinks etc.

Health Dept team seals two factories

While one was preparing substandard spices, the other was manufacturing pickles

The Health Department busted three factories preparing unhygienic food items during a raid today. The team, led by District Health Officer Dr Shivkaran Singh Kahlon, sealed two masala factories in Dhab Basti Ram area.
One of the busted factories, Kalia Grinders, was preparing spices locally but selling it as ‘packed in Denmark’.
Dr Kahlon said packets saying ‘packed in Delhi’ were also recovered from the godown. “The factory was grinding low-quality ingredients to make turmeric powder, garam masala, red chilly powder but was selling it as either imported or from renowned manufacturers,” he said. Five samples were collected from the factory and it was sealed.
The team sealed another grinding factory owned by Paramjit, who ran after shutting down the godowns. “The police even raided his residence but he could not be traced,” said Dr Kahlon adding that they had sealed the factory.
An unhygienic pickle factory, Titu Aachar Wala, was busted in Ram Bagh area. Dr Kahlon said lemons and other vegetables found at the factory were rotten and algae had grown in the drums in which pickle was being prepared. “We have collected three samples and few drums of pickle were destroyed,” said Dr Kahlon.
The team later raided a sweet shop and a general store in Ram Bagh area and collected samples. Panic gripped the shopkeepers in Dhab Basti Ram and Ram Bagh area after the news of health team’s visit reached them. Most of them fled from the market after shutting down their shops.
Dr Kahlon said the way shopkeepers ran established that there was something fishy about their businesses. He said they would conduct more raids in the area to check sale of substandard materials.

India - Global food safety violations

Food Sentry is continuing its analysis of international food safety violations.  Analyzing data from nearly 1,000 reported food safety violations from 73 countries over the past 15 months, our ­initial report showed that the top five countries that were found during laboratory testing to have the most food safety violations were China, the United States, India, Japan and Vietnam.
This report focuses on India. Our reports on China and the United States uncovered some surprising data, as does our analysis here of reported Indian food safety violations.
As background, we collected data from multiple food testing laboratories around the world.  Most countries test a percentage of the foods that are being imported.  A violation occurs when some kind of contaminant is detected in a food in excess of the levels allowed by the inspecting country.
Testing regimes vary from country to country. Some countries test as much as 30 percent of the food they import.  If there is a particular problem that comes to light, that number can increase to 50 percent for certain categories of foods, or foods from countries for which there is particular concern.  In comparison, the United States inspects less than 2 percent of food being imported and actually does laboratory testing on less than 1 percent.
When we looked at contaminants discovered in Indian food exports, we found pesticides to be the number one problem, accounting for 47 percent of all reported food safety violations for that country (a more detailed version of the above infographic is here). Twenty-five different pesticides turned up in excess in laboratory testing.  Vegetables, nuts and seeds, and herbs and spices were most likely to be contaminated with excessive residues.  We found several cases where a single product was contaminated with multiple pesticide residues, including one instance in which a single batch of curry leaves had residues from eight different pesticides (acephate, carbendazim, diafenthiuron, ethion, hexaconazole, methamidophos, monocrotophos and profenofos).
The next most common type of contaminants reported in Indian food exports were chemicals of various sorts.  Lab testing discovered calcium carbide, sulfur dioxide, Sudan IV dye, anthraquinone and ethoxyquin.  In our analysis, this data set is somewhat skewed by the fact that certain countries have issued a no-notice directive to India that they will no longer accept shrimp with levels of ethoxyquin in excess of 0.01 parts per million (ppm).  This resulted in a plethora of violations for Indian shrimp, which was previously held to a standard of 1 ppm for ethoxyquin.  The countries involved are currently in negotiation to resolve this issue.  Ethoxyquin is an anti-oxidant used in fish feed to keep it from going rancid. There is little scientific evidence one way or the other at this point about the risks of ethoxyquin to human health.
The third food safety violation of concern in Indian exports was mycotoxins, primarily in nuts, seeds, herbs and spices. These are toxins produced by fungi, most often by species of Aspergillus mold. Testing found instances of excessive aflatoxins B1 and B2 as well as ochratoxin. Mycotoxins can be quite toxic to humans; they are carcinogenic and have a good potential for causing both acute and chronic disease.
In the remaining categories we investigated (toxic metals, antibiotics, and pathogens) we found relatively few violations.  The toxic metal cadmium was found in excess in octopus and mud crabs; pathogens were limited to Salmonella in some vegetables, nuts, seeds and herbs and spices; residues from the antibiotics malachite green (a dye sometimes used for its anti-fungal properties) and AOZ (3-amino-2-oxazolidinone, a metabolite of furazolidone, a broad-spectrum antibacterial), were found in a very small sample of seafood and in rapeseed meal.
In the groups of foods we encountered in this analysis, those most likely to come to the United States are herbs and spices, nuts and seeds, and shellfish.  India is a primary supplier of herbs and spices (worth $209 million in 2012), nuts and seeds ($549 million) and shellfish ($583 million). As you can see, you are quite likely to encounter these products in your shopping routine.
The question to be asked is, what is the likelihood of an uninspected shipment being in violation of U.S. food safety regulations? Note that this includes not only contaminated food, but also food for which the paperwork is incorrect and food which is not labeled correctly or misbranded. The data to answer this question with any precision are hard to come by, but we can estimate based on some statements by FDA.
To add a little bit more perspective, the United States imported about 54.5 million tons of food in 2012, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service.  That translated to about 25 million individual shipments of food from foreign importers.  The Office of Regulatory Affairs at the FDA estimated that they inspected less than 1.5 percent of those shipments.
In 2011, Denise Williams, a supervisor in FDA’s import operations in southern California, indicated that out of 10 million food-related shipments, 16,000 were rejected by the FDA. If the FDA is inspecting only 1.5 percent of shipments (150,000 in this case) and it rejected 16,000, then we can figure a violation rate of about 11 percent. Eleven percent of the remaining uninspected shipments would be around 1.1 million shipments that could be expected to have some sort of food safety violation.
A “shipment” can be anything from a box to a crate to a shipboard container, so volume is difficult to assess.  Nonetheless, more than a million violative shipments making their way into U.S. markets are surely cause for concern.  With India making up such a large percentage of the imports in the categories identified above, you can see that your likelihood of encountering them is higher than you might like.

In addition to formal shipments, there are foods that come to the United States that are beyond the reach of the FDA. They arrive in the mail in smaller amounts, or are brought in illegally (“cheese mules” are an interesting example).  As we mentioned in a previous article, Spices – More Than a Matter of Taste, spices are very likely to be in this category.  Be wary of internet purchases and exercise caution when buying spices that have been repackaged in unbranded, unlabeled containers.

Supplyco to test rice, vegetables for toxic residue

Results of analysis will be made public for consumer awareness

The Kerala State Civil Supplies Corporation (Supplyco) will start testing rice, vegetables, meat and fish for contaminants, including pesticide residue, and make the results public for consumer awareness, beginning next month.
It will be the first time in Kerala that vegetables, fish and meat will be extensively tested for poisonous residues and results made public.
A senior official of Supplyco, which has around 1,400 provisions stores and vegetables and fruits outlets across Kerala, said that the process for testing samples at the Council for Food Research and Development (CFRD) laboratory in Konni, had been set in motion.
He said that random sample collection will begin next month and that the results should be out within a fortnight of that. Broad-based testing of vegetables, fruits, fish and meat has been a long-standing demand, considering that Kerala depends on its neighbours for the bulk of its food requirements, including rice. Tests on rice samples will ensure that the customers get the best quality produce.
Kerala requires more than eight lakh tonnes of vegetables daily, of which nearly four lakh tonnes are produced within the State.
The rest of the supplies comes from Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. Director of CFRD M. K. Mukundan said that Supplyco had approached the laboratory with the proposal for testing vegetables and other samples and the laboratory at Konni, in Pathanamthitta district, is equipped to do all the tests. Testing of the major food samples is part of the corporation’s preparations to meet Food Safety and Standards Act stipulations.
The corporation is also building 63 new godowns with a combined capacity of three lakh tonnes at the district and taluk headquarters.
The godowns, expected to cost around Rs.180 crore, will be sufficient to store food items for three months. There will be 14 godowns at the district headquarters and 49 at the taluk levels.
The godown project has been handed over to the government-owned consultancy Kitco for implementation and most of the new facilities will come up on government land.

CAIT demands extension of one year for filing returns in FSS Act, 2006

The Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT), in a representation to health minister Ghulam Nabi Azad and Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) chairperson K Chandramouli, demanded that that the due date for filing returns also be extended by a year.
“It is to be noted that the deadline to meet such obligations expires on May 31, 2013. It is estimated that nearly more than a crore food business operators (FBOs) in the country will be affected,” the communication by the traders' body added.
The last date for FBOs to register anew or obtain licenses under the Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), 2006, or renew the existing ones or transfer from the old registrations/licenses to the new ones has already been extended by a year (from February 4, 2013 to February 4, 2014).
“The deadline for registration/licenses, renewal or transfer was extended appreciating the difficulties of the FBOs as well as those of the administrative machinery, but the position is the same today,” CAIT added.
“When the government extended the deadline, the last date for filing of returns should also have been extended, because registration is always the pre-condition for filing returns. Therefore, the date of filing returns must also be extended,” the traders' body added.
As per Regulation 2.1.13 of the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing Business) Regulation, 2011, it is binding on every licensee to submit the returns in Form D-1, as provided in Schedule-2 in respect of each class of food at the end of the financial year before March 31 every year.
And if there is any delay in filing returns beyond May 31 each year, there is a provision for a penalty of Rs 100 per day of delay in Regulation 2.1.13 (3) of the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing Business) Regulation, 2011.

City looks forward to rise in supply, dip in prices


The HinduThe cost of 20-litre bubbletop cans, which had risen by a minimum of Rs. 5 last week, will also come down once all the units resume operations

Manufacturers said water supply shortage would come down to 10% over next 2-3 days

At a time when the city is reeling under a water crisis, the reopening of many packaged drinking water units around Chennai is expected to significantly reduce the shortage in supply in the next few days.

Two weeks ago, 92 of the 309 private units manufacturing packaged drinking water were directed to be closed for not having valid licence to operate. Water samples from 51 of these units were then found to be satisfactory.

Ahamed Kasim, regional manager, Repute Water, one of the firms that will reopen soon, said that it would take 48 hours for the product to reach the market after the unit is reopened. “We already have food and safety licences and will soon apply to the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) for its consent. We are very happy about the order,” he said.

A. Shakespeare, general secretary of Tamil Nadu Packaged Drinking Water Manufacturers Association, said that the shortage in private water supply would reduce to 10 per cent from the current 30-40 per cent once the units begin functioning and distributing in the next two or three days.

The cost of 20-litre bubbletops, which went up by a minimum of Rs. 5 last week, is also set to come down. “But, there may be a marked dip only after all units start operations,” he said. Every year, about 50-100 units are opened to meet the growing water demand in the metropolitan area.

M. Gunasekaran, who runs a unit in Red Hills, said that he was confident that his unit would be allowed to operate as the water conformed to quality standards. “I produce 600 bubble tops and 50-100 water sachets every day under two brands ‘Real Fresh’ and ‘Bio Fresh’. I am planning to discuss the issue with association members before applying for the license issued by Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board. It also depends on the norms laid down by the TNPCB.”

Officials of the Bureau of Indian Standards, southern region, said that consumers could be assured of the quality of the water supplied to them. BIS would check the quality of the finished product and the hygiene practices of the units. TNPCB’s requisites for a license mainly have to do with aspects dealing with pollution. “We test the water samples for nearly 82 parameters, including pesticidal residue,” said a BIS official.

Sources in Commissionerate of Food Safety and Drug Administration said that water sachets without BIS certification were being destroyed all over the State. “We are issuing notices warning the manufacturers to apply for certification. Similarly cool drinks that have imitated popular brands are also being destroyed. Some time ago, we had issued notices to five drinking water units near Chennai asking them to close down. Those have been closed down by the TNPCB,” he said.

Only 34 of 85 Chennai samples safe



ChennaiOnly 34 of the 85 samples picked up by the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) from the packaged drinking water units in Chennai and tested by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) were found to be ‘satisfactory’.
The TNPCB produced this report before the National Green Tribunal (NGT) on Monday responding to the suo motu notice by NGT in March pertaining to the shutting down of 98 water units in the city by TNPCB for running without government permits. The NGT comprising Justice M Chockalingam and expert member R Nagendran has asked the TNPCB and FSSAI to collect samples for a second time from the units that allegedly supplied the sub-standard and non-potable water, as they pleaded that they were not given prior notice of the inspection.
TNPCB and FSSAI officials collected samples from 92 water units this May as six units had stopped functioning. The break up goes like this: Just 34 units among the 92 sell water which is in the ’satisfactory’ category and 17 firms sell sub-standard water but potable. Samples from 26 units were found to be unsafe and sub-standard and samples from eight other firms tested to be completely unsafe and not potable.
A senior TNPCB official explained to DC that potable water is tested for various parameters such as PH count, which should be neutral at seven as more than PH-7 would mean that the water is alkaline and a count less than seven would mean that it is acidic. The labs also tested the water for TDS (total dissolved solids) and for bacterial contents such as coliform and e-coli. “The major problem in many tested samples now was violation of bacterial content. They were unsafe for humans”, the officer said, requesting anonymity.
TNPCB to get full details on number of bottled water firms
Pramila Krishnan
For the first time, the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) will find out how many bottled water firms are operating across Tamil Nadu.
The board was directed by the National Green Tribunal (NGT) on Monday to produce a full-fledged report on the packaged drinking water firms in the state and whether the units are functioning with or without license and BIS certification, on July 2, 2013.  While delivering orders on packaged water firms, justice M.Chockalingam asked the TNPCB to serve show cause notices to all the water firms in the state and prepare the report with their replies.
More than 860 private firms are the members of the Tamil Nadu packaged drinking water traders association. Now with the count by the TNPCB all the water firms will be found out and also their licenses will be checked. NGT judge M.Chockalingam and expert member R.Nagendran pronounced that all the firms could function as usual even if they were found to have shortcomings because closure of these firms might cause water scarcity in the state.
And firms, which got the clearance in the green court on Monday, might increase the prices exorbitantly and enjoy the trade. Earlier declaring verdict for 92 packaged water firms in Chennai, from which water samples were tested by the TNPCB and FSSAI (Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) and produced in the court, NGT panel said,” Electricity can be restored for 34 firms whose samples were proved to be of good standard.
For the other 51 firms, electricity will be supplied only during inspection by TNPCB to collect samples and should be suspended until further orders on July 2, 2013 by the court.”  The panel also said that all 92 firms have to pay for the tests conducted by the TNPCB and FSSAI.
Speaking to DC after the verdict TNPCB member-secretary S.Balaji said, “Finding out all the water selling firms in Tamil Nadu is a tedious project. But with the help of our district engineers we will come up with this report as ordered by the NGT.” He said that expenses amounting to Rs 1. 40 lakh will be borne by the Chennai based water firms.

Relief for 51 packaged drinking water units

National Green Tribunal asks pollution control board to analyse samples from 34 units again

Granting relief to 51 packaged drinking water units which met prescribed standards, the National Green Tribunal (NGT), Southern Bench, on Monday said these units could carry on packaging and selling water in the city until further orders.
The NGT, taking note of a report in The Hindu, had directed the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) to look into allegations of packaged water units violating norms. The Board issued closure orders to 92 units in the city that lacked valid consent. The South India Packaged Drinking Water Manufacturers’ Association challenged the closure orders.
Later, the Tribunal asked the TNPCB and Commissionerate of Food Safety and Drug Administration to inspect the closed units and submit a report after analysing water samples. Those units remained closed till Monday.
When the matter came up for hearing, they filed a report stating that out of samples collected from 85 units, only 34 met the prescribed standards, while 17 samples were classified as substandard, but not unsafe. The remaining 34 did not meet the necessary parameters.
The Bench, comprising Justice M. Chockalingam and Prof. R. Nagendran, said there could be no impediment in allowing the 34 units that met the prescribed standards and 17 others that were not unsafe to carry on packaging and selling water as an interim measure until further orders. Regarding the remaining 34 units, the authorities were asked to redo the analysis of samples while they remained closed.
The Tamil Nadu Packaged Drinking Water Manufacturers’ Association filed another application seeking to implead itself in the case. It claimed that its 869 members held Certificates of Manufacturing Licence (CML) of the Bureau of Indian Standards and also from the Food Safety Standards Authority of India (FSSAI Licence). The association said unless packaged drinking water was allowed to be manufactured by existing manufacturers, it would lead to severe shortage of safe drinking water. Its lawyer, C. Seethapathy, said TNPCB had issued show-cause notices to around 300 units and rejected their replies. It had started issuing closure notices.
Following this submission, the Bench passed another interim order allowing the association’s members to carry on packaging and selling water until further orders, while allowing the TNPCB to continue issuing show-cause notices to erring units.
The Tribunal ordered the TNPCB to file another report by July 2 regarding units that did not have valid consent orders or certificates of the Bureau of Indian Standards.

Gutka worth Rs.13 lakh seized

GVMC officials on Monday seized gutka (chewable tobacco) worth Rs.13 lakh. The tobacco was being unloaded from a lorry belonging to a Kolkata company near Kanakamma temple at China Waltair.
Food Safety Officer Janardhan effected the seizure under the supervision of Designated Food Safety Officer S. Hanumantha Rao.
GVMC Chief Medical Officer (Health) warned of stern action against sale of gutka.

Pune Municipal Corporation lab gets ISO accreditation

PUNE: The food and water testing laboratory of the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) received ISO:9001:2008 accreditation under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, said a press statement issued by the civic body .
Started at Salunke Vihar in Kondhwa a year back, the lab had limited use for nearly a year, but was opened to the public in January 2013, offering a bouquet of 99 types of tests. Officials said the lab was designed primarily for testing meat at the Kondhwa slaughterhouse. Since it is well-equipped, the lab can be used by common people.
The lab was upgraded by installing newer and advanced equipment to make it fit enough to get an accreditation from the National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories(NABL), an autonomous body under the aegis of the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India. The NABL grants accreditation to only those laboratories that conform to its stringent norms. The laboratory is located at the Kondhwa slaughterhouse on Salunke Vihar Road and accepts samples from Monday to Saturday during working hours. It has advanced equipment and machinery required for testing samples of water, food items and even sewage. The fee for testing food, which practically includes anything from grains to processed eatables to water samples, are equivalent to rates charged by any state government laboratory. Not just citizens, business establishments like hotels, warehouses, godowns can also avail of the lab's services, PMC officials said.