Oct 24, 2016

Maha govt ignores milk quality survey

Pune: The Maharashtra unit of Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) is yet to confirm its participation in the union government’s mandatory National Milk Quality Survey, which was initiated in September this year.
This shocking revelation comes even as other states like Uttar Pradesh, New Delhi and Tamil Nadu have already completed their milk quality checks and sent the results to Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI). States like Goa and Haryana are currently collecting the milk samples prior to forwarding it to laboratories for further tests.
Ten cities in Maharashtra including Pune, Navi Mumbai, Jalgaon, Nagpur, etc, have been identified as hotspots. “We are yet to receive any communication neither official letter or calls from FSSAI to the office of commissioner of FDA, Maharashtra,” Monika Puniya, Assistant Director (Technical), FSSAI, informed Sakal Times. 
According to sources at FSSAI, without confirmation, the national body will not be able to share the action plan with the State, which will then have to undertake the survey and complete it in stipulated time. Maharashtra could also be a culprit in causing an overall delay to the national survey, which was supposed to be completed by December this year.
FSSAI, on the basis of the past reports and incidents of adulteration, shared the survey plan to each of the states, which was inclusive of the number of milk samples to be collected, areas of interest for sampling, labs where the samples will be processed, etc. Food Safety Officer (FSO) from each division in the State was assigned to do the job in the stipulated period and share the results with FSSAI.
According to sources at FDA’s Pune division, there has not been any communication from the Mumbai-based headquarters about initiating any milk sampling as yet.
“We are not aware of any survey and have not been instructed about the same so far,” said a senior official from FDA, Pune.
What is National Milk Quality Survey? 
- The survey, argued to be first of its kind, aims to test the quality of milk to understand the prevalence of milk adulteration in states and chalk out measures to curb the menace. During the survey, over 1,700 milk samples will be randomly picked and tested for fat, Solids not Fat (SNF), vegetable oil, detergent, hydrogen peroxide, formalin, sugar, glucose, urea, starch, boric acid, ammonium sulphate, nitrates, cellulose maltodextrin. Each state will have a state-level steering committee comprising members like commissioner of FDA, milk commissioner of the State, personnel from dairy industries and Food Safety Officers (FSO).

No comments:

Post a Comment