Jun 18, 2017

‘RO filter producers not following dissolved salts rule’

NEW DELHI: The country is facing a serious water crisis of a different nature. RO (reverse osmosis) filter machines available in India are sold without the mandatory certification of the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), making the water they treat potentially dangerous to health. 
BIS rules mandate that any product sold in India, which relates to the safety of the consumer needs the ISI mark. The BIS in its wisdom has omitted to include ROs from its list, though many big bottled water companies have got the necessary ISI certification. 
Acting on a petition from an NGO, ‘Friends’, the National Green Tribunal has sought a response from the Ministry of Water Resources and other concerned bodies. RO companies, which aggressively market their products with celebrities offering 100 per cent pure water, do not state the water does not meet the approval of the certifying authority.
On the RTI question whether the RO companies have applied for certification, BIS said that queries on the matter have been sent to various departments.
The petition said that though the BIS has failed to set the minimum level of Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), it has specified the maximum level.
TDS is the dissolved ionized solids, such as salts and minerals in water. BIS has stipulated the upper limit of TDS in drinking water at 500 ppm. The lower level is 30 ppm to keep the mineral content at safe levels. De-mineralised water is mostly used in batteries and various industrial works.
The petition points out RO manufacturers are blatantly flouting the statutory BIS rules which state that “all RO manufacturers should write on their products that ‘RO system is not recommended for Arsenic level above 0.01 mg/l and flouride level above 8.0 mg/l’.”
With water in Indian homes coming from questionable sources and containing various toxic substances and chemicals, there is no guarantee that ROs have the capability to treat it to meet health safety standards, thanks to BIS.

Think before you drink


NEW DELHI: The country is facing a serious water crisis of a different nature. RO (reverse osmosis) filter machines available in India are sold without the mandatory certification of the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), making the water they treat potentially dangerous to health. BSI rules mandate that any product sold in India, which relates to the safety of the consumer, needs the ISI mark.
The BIS in its wisdom has omitted to include ROs from its list, though many big bottled water companies have procured ISI certification—most trusted safety stamp for Indian consumers. Acting on a petition from an NGO, ‘Friends’, the National Green Tribunal has sought a response from the Ministry of Water Resources and other concerned bodies. RO companies, which aggressively market their products with celebrities offering 100 per cent pure water, do not declare whether their water meets the approval of the certifying authority.
On a RTI question whether the companies have applied for certification, BIS said all queries have been sent to various departments. Moreover, though the BIS has failed to set the minimum level of Total Dissolved Solids (TDS)—the dissolved ionized solids, such as salts and minerals in water—it has specified the maximum level at 500 ppm. The lower TDS level is 30 ppm at which the mineral content in water are kept at safe levels. De-mineralised water is mostly used in batteries and various industrial works.
The petition points out RO manufacturers are blatantly flouting the statutory BIS rules which state that “all RO manufacturers should write on their products that ‘RO system is not recommended for Arsenic level above 0.01 mg/l and Fluoride level above 8.0 mg/l’.” With water in Indian homes coming from questionable sources and containing various toxic substances and chemicals, there is no guarantee that ROs have the capability to treat it to meet health safety standards, thanks to BIS.
In places where arsenic and fluoride levels exceed the said prescribed limits of water, people who use Reverse osmosis (RO) filters do not realise they are drinking poisonous water. “They are misled into believing they are drinking so-called safe water purified by their RO filters because of marketing gimmicks by the filter companies,” the petition alleged.
RO companies are blatantly flouting the National Water Policy 2012. BIS has allowed up to 80 per cent wastage of pre-treated potable water or ground water for point-of-use RO water filters, contrary to the water policy.
“The RO system was originally invented to create potable water from otherwise unusable sea water and was never meant for filtering ground water. At present, lakhs of people are buying RO systems, meaning that lakhs of people will waste around 80 per cent of potable water,” the plea said, seeking restraint on the sale of ROs that are selling without mandatory ISI certification.

FSSAI plans labelling of GM foods

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is planning a regime of labelling genetically modified (GM) foods, which do not exist in India as of now.
The move comes after India's apex regulator for GM foods, the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC), approved India's first transgenic food crop GM Mustard for commercial cultivation last month. The environment ministry has to take a final call.
FSSAI, though responsible for testing food standards, is passing the buck on independent testing of the impact of GM foods on human health. Its officials said that the environment ministry should look at it.
"We had a meeting with FSSAI two weeks back and requested it to take over the approvals of processed GM foods. But they asked GEAC to continue appraising proposals for processed foods until they are ready to take over the entire regulation of GM foods and imported processed foods. Meanwhile, they will handle the labelling process," said Amita Prasad, additional secretary of the Environment Ministry.
Till now only one GM crop — Bt Cotton — is grown in Indian fields. The only other food crop to receive all approvals was Bt Brinjal. However, the government blocked its introduction. There has been widespread political and public opposition to the technology.
As per Section 22 of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, FSSAI has the responsibility to regulate GM organisms and products once they are approved by GEAC. FSSAI even submitted a status report before the Supreme Court, which is hearing a case against commercial cultivation of GM Mustard, and stressed that no regulation is yet framed to regulate GM foods. DNA has reviewed a copy of the status report.
The development comes after GEAC flagged in April the absence of any regulatory mechanism to deal with the import of processed GM foods.
India is dependent on imports to meet its demand for edible oils, including mustard oil. But there has been opposition from some farmer groups that the GM technology will lead to industrialisation of food production and compromise food security.
While the Environment Ministry had excluded approvals of processed GM foods from its mandate through a 2007 notification, the Union Health Ministry requested it to continue regulating GM processed foods till FSSAI is able to look into the matter in a scientific manner.
As a result, the Environment Ministry began keeping the 2007 notification in abeyance at regular intervals, till it last expired on March 2016.
Speaking to DNA, FSSAI's chief executive officer, Pawan Kumar Agrawal, said, "Regarding GM foods, we come into the picture when GEAC allows certain crops to be cultivated in India. After clearance, all GM foods would be subject to the same standards that apply to regular food."
"The only requirement will be to see if it is above a certain threshold of certain GM protein found, then that has to be declared and that is what we are working on...the categories of food for which the labelling requirement will be made mandatory," he said.
In its status report before the top court, FSSAI dwelt on the complexity of the labelling regime. "Any labelling regime... will have practical implications on trade as it will necessitate implementation of large-scale threshold testing regimes and traceability protocols with back up documentation, which would cause significant escalation of costs."
Activists said that FSSAI should go beyond simply labelling GM foods. "We are talking about rigorous independent health safety assessment, and FSSAI should not get away from that role and also look at edible oils derived from GM crops," said Kavita Kuruganti of the Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture, a loose network of more than 400 organisations from 20 states working on farm issues.

Adulteration provides food for thought

From plastic rice to chemicals in milk, questions over food safety have become a recurrent theme in our everyday lives. As concerns mount in the wake of recent controversies, activists say a designated authority to enforce food safety norms and keep adulteration in check is the need of the hour.
Last week, the city witnessed a video of MTC staff purporting to show plastic rice being served in their canteen. The clip, showing men in khaki bouncing small balls of rice off the walls and tables at the canteen of the Ayanavaram bus depot, spread like wildfire on social media. The footage also came close on the heels of information shared on WhatsApp regarding the seizure of alleged plastic rice in other parts of the country.
In a State where its own Dairy Development Minister came out with the shocking allegation that private milk producers were adding chemicals to their products, similar claims pertaining to adulteration of rice with plastic seemed ever more probable. So, is there really plastic in rice and sugar, and are there chemicals in milk? Could eggs be made of plastic? Was there any truth to the messages circulating on WhatsApp or were they merely old wives’ tales that no one in the position of authority was prepared to debunk?
As one scare story after another finds prominence through social media platforms, questions are asked, and sometimes answered, with knee-jerk reactions. As adulteration has long remained a tool of choice for unscrupulous traders looking to make a quick buck, only the adulterants have varied with time. Consumer activists point to the need for a proper system capable of answering these questions in a scientific manner, and wherever necessary, allaying rumours and suspicions about food safety that arise periodically among the public.
The term ‘plastic rice’ came into being after a scandal was exposed in China in 2010, in which pellets were made by mixing sweet potato powder with poor quality rice. “A resin was found to have been used for the bonding. But this was banned.
“But in India, although there have been several complaints and allegations of rice being mixed with plastic, tests conducted on so-called ‘plastic rice’ have conclusively proved that there had been no plastic element in such rice samples,” said A. C. Mohan, secretary, Federation of Tamil Nadu Rice Mill Owners and Paddy-Rice Dealers Associations.
As regards the clips showing rice balls being bounced off the walls, Mr. Mohan said that gelatine, which is found naturally in rice, could make it bouncy if rolled into balls. “Boiled rice has more of gelatine, which retains more of its germinal matter. While raw rice varieties including Basmati are not sticky, varieties grown in Tamil Nadu such as Ponni, ADT 36 and Adhisiya Ponni are more sticky than the usual boiled rice. Rubber samba and Maappilai samba are rare varieties that have even more starch and gelatin and are suitable to make kall dosai. These varieties take longer to grow (in some cases six months) and are more healthy,” he explained.
Federation president D. Thulasingam said that rice merchants were also consumers in the first place, and that they will not sell such adulterated products. “Various government agencies had taken samples and conducted tests but so far, no plastic has been found in rice anywhere in the country. Plastic cannot be cooked, it will only melt in the heat. Rice will sink in water, whereas plastic will float. Any home-maker can differentiate between boiled and raw rice by mere feel, smell and sight,” he said.
It also does not make economic sense to mix plastic with rice, he said. Plastic pellets available in the market are costlier than rice. “A kilo of plastic costs anywhere between ₹80 and ₹100, whereas rice costs ₹30-₹60 a kilo. How can someone use a costlier item to make something cheaper? Also, we have at least six months worth of stocks of rice and there is no need for importing rice, let alone ‘plastic rice’,” Mr. Thulasingam added.
R. Kathiravan, designated officer, Food Safety department, Chennai, said that 20 samples of rice were collected and sent for analysis. While 16 of them were sent to the food analysis lab at the King Institute campus in Chennai, four samples were sent to a lab in Thanjavur . “Of the 15 results received till date, there has been no evidence of any plastic content in the rice in Chennai,” he said.
Chemicals in milk
Until a few days ago, milk vendors too had to ward off such queries from consumers after State Dairy Development Minister K.T. Rajenthra Bhalaji levelled allegations against certain private milk brands, saying they were adding chemicals to milk.
In the wake of the controversy, district administrations stepped in at places such as Madurai and Coimbatore and tested milk samples submitted by the residents. In Madurai, the electronic milk adulteration tests showed that out of 217 samples taken on three different dates in the city and two other locations in the suburbs, 25 samples were found to be of sub-standard quality, while another was found to be unsafe for consumption. District Collector K. Veera Raghava Rao said that awareness was high among rural people as well.
Maheswari of Jawahar Nagar, Thirumangalam, in Madurai, said she purchased milk from a vendor who supplied it in quantities of 100 ml and 150 ml. “Since it was not branded, we decided to provide a sample of it for testing and found that it was safe to consume,” she added.
Madurai-based consumer activist Andrews pointed out that the government officials carried out tests only after the Minister for Dairy Development raised the issue of adulteration, adding that such tests should be conducted on a regular basis. “Not just milk, the officials should also carry out periodic tests on all items including oil and rice as there have been complaints of sub-standard goods coming in,” he added.
Adulteration of milk is being monitored on a monthly basis, said a senior Food Safety department official. “Of the samples we collected, only one from Madurai was found to be unsafe, as soap oil had been mixed with it. With regard to the other samples, some were found to be sub-standard — containing water, for instance, in milk, but they were not unsafe in terms of health,” he said. While sub-standard milk can attract a penalty, unsafe milk can lead to a case in court, a fine and imprisonment, he noted.
A milk industry expert said that so far, in samples lifted by the Food Safety department, only samples of unpackaged milk have been found to contain traces of detergent or soap oil.
“The soap element may have even been due to improper cleansing of utensils at homes. Private milk producers know that their customers are brand-conscious and loyal to their brands due to certain factors, the most important being quality. At times, when it comes to favoured brands, consumers won’t even bother about the cost. Companies will not compromise on quality and end up losing the loyalty of such consumers,” he said.
However, the Milk Commissionerate has stopped taking samples of milk ever since the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) stepped in and began collecting samples.
Plastic eggs scare
In the wake of the recent plastic eggs scare, acting on a State-wide directive and complaints from consumers, checks were conducted on eggs in Coimbatore district. All of the 161 samples collected in April this year were found to be safe. Samples of popular White Leghorn were tested at the government laboratory in Madurai,” said O.L.S. Vijay, designated officer, FSSAI, Coimbatore.
Adulteration not new
With plastics and chemicals prevalent in pretty much everything we use, the adulteration scare is here to stay. In the 1980’s food adulteration was something that people had just begun hearing about — it used to mean stones in rice, water in milk, sawdust in tea and brick powder in chilli powder. But all that is passé now.
Adulteration has taken on a new avatar. It now comes in the form of non-permitted colours being added to snacks like bhajji and pakoda sold on the roadsides, maida bleached with chemicals, oil-soluble red colour added to chilli powder and cheap palm oil mixed with other cooking oils to reduce the price, says G. Santhanarajan of the Consumer Association of India (CAI).
“Even the word adulteration is not to be found in the Food Safety and Standards Act. The Act talks about safe foods, sub-standard and unsafe foods. You can simply pay a fine and get off the hook unless the product is deemed unsafe. We now have to be afraid of plastics, especially those that come in the form of food packaging. Packing hot food items in plastic bags is bad for health as the heat causes the plastic to react. Everything from oil to water to pulses that we buy comes in plastic packs. But since nobody has time for anything, people don’t even bother to carry their own bags to department stores to avoid plastic bags,” he rued.
Enforcement failure
After the Food Safety and Standards Act came into force, though a separate set-up came into being to check food standards, the very same officials of various local bodies have been implementing the norms. Consumer activists feel that the department is failing at enforcement.
Nirmala Desikan, chairman and managing trustee, CAI, said that the new Act was a detailed and more comprehensive one than the one that it replaced. “There are so many things that are adulterated, but the problem is that they (officials) are not strong enough in implementing the rules. We also don’t know how many complaints it (Food Safety department) receives or how many are dealt with. The department is not transparent,” she said.
Food Safety officials have refused to provide the exact data on adulteration of milk in the State to The Hindu. Only rough figures of complaints and samples collected were provided. Each laboratory gets around 500 samples a month. Just 100 samples are collected from milk products, said a source.
Many residents have registered complaints with the Food Safety department through its WhatsApp number 9444042322. “We will increase random sampling to study the trends. The analysis is done in three days. Samples are collected within 24 hours of receipt of complaints,” said an official.
But activist T. Sadagopan is far less optimistic. “The very few checks that are done hardy matter since very few people are penalised. And those who adulterate will continue to do so. For the consumer, this would only mean unchecked adulteration leading to an adverse impact on their health.”
(With inputs from Aloysius Xavier Lopez and Zubeda Hamid in Chennai, L. Srikrishna in Madurai and Wilson Thomas in Coimbatore)

Why food safety matters to our well-being


Medical practitioners blame adulterants for a host of health complications.
Over the years, doctors and researchers have found that the more toxins we expose ourselves to in our environment and our food chain, the greater the health complications we may face.

Take diabetes for instance – India has 69 million diabetics, as per the International Diabetes Federation’s Atlas 2015. A number of studies have shown, says endocrinologist Jayashree Gopal, that greater use of pesticides increases the prevalence of diabetes. “Acute pesticide exposure can lead to blood sugar shooting up, and chronic or long-term exposure can make an individual more prone to diabetes,” she says. And this is just one among a number of chemicals that we are being exposed to in our daily lives. From shampoos and car fresheners to the plastic boxes in which we store our food, our environment contains an ever-increasing number of what are known as endocrine-disrupting chemicals, Dr. Gopal says. “They enter our system at different levels – you could inhale the fumes of a scent, eat food wrapped in plastic or even have it enter your body through printed receipts that you handle. Even if disposed of, these chemicals leach into the groundwater and re-enter our food chain,” she says.
Pernicious effects
While there have been no long-term human studies as of yet, animal studies have shown that these endocrine-disrupting chemicals can cause a number of problems: thyroid disorders, low sperm count in men and even affect the developing foetus in pregnant women, she says.
Oncologists too say that long-term exposure to chemical carcinogens can lead to cancer, and at times, these chemicals can contaminate food and water.
In immediate cases, adulterants in food or drinks can cause gastric irritation, vomiting, diarrhoea and even jaundice, if they contain an infectious material, says S. Raghunandan, professor of medicine at Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital.
In the case of adulterated tea for instance , regular intake of tea containing synthetic colour can lead to gastrointestinal diseases, said O.L.S. Vijay, designated officer, FSSAI, Coimbatore.
However, Dr. Raghunandan says how adulterants affect the body can be difficult to predict, as it depends on the substance used and how long a person is exposed to it.

Himachal Pradesh: Only one officer to monitor food safety and quality!

Himachal Pradesh which had 6,864,602 population as per 2011 Census has only one Food and Safety Officer to monitor food safety and quality in the State. Though the total number of sanctioned posts of such officer is 13 but at present there is only one officer for all the 12 districts of the State. This lone officer is posted in Chamba-Kangra district.
Jagdish Dhiman, Designated Officer in the Food Safety and Regulation department stated that there is serious shortage of food safety officers and consequently, food samples could not be collected for tests to check safety and quality aspects of various food items. Under Section 38 of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, only Food Safety Officer can take food samples for tests to ascertain its quality and safety aspects.
Doctors and health experts say that consumption of adulterated food items cause vomiting, loose motions, fever, diarrhea and other digestive and intestinal ailments. Monsoon is about to commence and such food related ailments increase during the rainy seasons.
In Himachal Pradesh, the State Government has left it to the people to look after their safety.