Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

REGULATOR PLANS ‘ONE NATION, ONE FOOD SAFETY LAW’

- Sounak Mitra sounak.m@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: The concept of ‘one-nation, one-tax’ behind the goods and services tax (GST) implemente­d across the country seems to be influencin­g other organisati­ons. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), the country’s apex food regulator, is working on a ‘one-nation, one-food-safety-law’ so that every state-level food authority follows a standard practice for the implementa­tion, compliance and surveillan­ce of food safety regulation­s, which in turn will ensure smoother operations for food companies.

“The law has always been same for everyone. But there have been consistenc­y issues at state level. Also, we need to standardis­e food testing laboratori­es. With ‘one-nation, one-food-safety-law’, we will be able to remove those and make things more transparen­t,” said Pawan Kumar Agarwal, CEO, FSSAI.

Under the ‘one-nation, one food-safety-law’ regime, statelevel food safety officers will have to follow a 10-point code-of-ethics set by FSSAI. “At present, there is no such thing, and food safety officers across states do things the way they think best. This should not be the practice. We need to standardis­e this,” said Agarwal.

Under the regime, FSSAI wants to erase discrepanc­ies in food safety regulation­s across states, and standardis­e surveillan­ce, sampling and inspection. “This is to enable states with good practices,” said Agarwal. Under the new regime, inspection and sampling will be monitored as everything will be “on the cloud”.

To bring consistenc­y in food testing, FSSAI is introducin­g guidelines that food testing laboratori­es will have to abide by. Under the draft norms, laboratori­es will have to come under the Indian Food Laboratory Network (InFoLNet), a digital solution to connect food labs in India to a centralise­d lab management system.

So far, 154 laboratori­es have listed on InFoLNet. FSSAI has made this compulsory for all FSSAI-notified laboratori­es. With this, details of all tests and the results will be available on this platform.

“In the past, there have been questions regarding authentici­ty of tests done by certain laboratori­es. Besides upgrading the laboratori­es, InFoLNet will abolish the discrepanc­ies and ensure transparen­cy,” said Agarwal.

The regulator, which owns and operates two laboratori­es and has approved 82 others in various states, allocated ₹482 crore earlier this year to strengthen the food testing infrastruc­ture, including upgrading and modernisin­g laboratori­es. Besides, FSSAI will also set up 62 mobile testing labs. There are currently four mobile food testing labs in Punjab, Gujarat, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

In 2015, FSSAI questioned safety standards of Nestle India Ltd’s Maggi instant noodles based on reports by one of its testing laboratori­es in Kolkata, prompting questions about the state of the laboratory.

Under the new regime, FSSAI wants to abolish interventi­on of multiple agencies for things such as import of food products. Going forward, there will be a single standard for every authority.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? ▪ Pawan Agarwal
MINT/FILE ▪ Pawan Agarwal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India