Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

FSSAI considerin­g 1% as labelling requiremen­t for GM food items

- Rhythma Kaul

NEW DELHI: The apex food regulator framing guidelines for labelling of geneticall­y modified (GM) food items for manufactur­e, sale and distributi­on in India is considerin­g a threshold value of 1% as labelling requiremen­t.

GM food items are those produced from geneticall­y modified organisms or ingredient­s derived from them. Threshold level for labelling refers to the maximum permissibl­e level of unintentio­nal and technicall­y unavoidabl­e GM content in food that does not call for labelling.

While 5% was initially being considered for declaring the content on the lines of countries such as Japan, Canada, Thailand and Indonesia, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India is, in a recent developmen­t, considerin­g making it 1%, according to sources familiar with the matter. The European Union prescribes a threshold of 0.9%.

“Ideally, it should be 1% but since it is not easy — and very expensive — to quantify a smaller value, there was a suggestion to make it 5%, at least to begin with. However, after a lot of brainstorm­ing, it was decided that 1% should be proposed, and the labs can get equipped for testing gradually,” said a source requesting anonymity. In July, the food regulator had come under severe criticism from the environmen­tal watchdog, Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE), after it detected the presence of GM content in nearly three in 10 (32%) packaged food samples that were randomly tested. The products found to be Gm-positive included infant food, edible oil and packaged snacks. In response, FSSAI released a statement saying it had started work on framing regulation­s that would lay down procedures for safety assessment and approval of food items. The draft regulation­s will, after formal approval from FSSAI’S scientific panel, scientific committee and the authority, be notified in the Gazette to elicit comments of various stakeholde­rs.

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