Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Give consumers nutrition facts, not fiction on GM foods

- SANCHITA SHARMA

In the absence of regulation, geneticall­y-modified processed foods are being sold and traded in India without government approval, according to the Delhi-based green NGO, Centre of Science and Environmen­t (CSE). Twenty-one of the 65 popular food brands, including infant formula for lactoseint­olerant babies, were GM positive, found CSE, after testing products for corn, soya, rapeseed and cotton (seeds), which are among the most common GM crops around in the world.

GM foods cannot be manufactur­ed, imported or sold in India, according to the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) that is charged with ensuring food safety. “FSSAI has also informed that no such standards for Geneticall­y Modified foods have been laid down/ notified. However, even in the absence of specific standards for Geneticall­y Modified (GM) foods, as per Section 22 of Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, GM foods are not allowed to be manufactur­ed, imported or sold in the country, health minister JP Nadda informed the Lok Sabha on February 9 in a written reply.

FSSAI’S new draft Food Safety and Standards (Labelling and Display) Regulation­s, 2018, attempt to address the many gaps, including an amendment in 2013 to the Legal Metrology (Packaged Commoditie­s) Rules that mandate that packages containing geneticall­y modified foods print the words ‘GM’ on their principal display panel. “This rule was inconsiste­nt with the fact that GM foods are not allowed in India and in fact created the false perception that GM food was allowed,” said CSE’S Geneticall­y Modified Processed Foods in India report, which found labels of only five samples said GM ingredient­s were used, while three of five brands labelled ‘GM free’ were GM positive.

Changing lifestyles and increasing incomes are projected to make India’s food packaging industry worth more than $65 billion by 2020, making it the third biggest markets for packaged food market after China and the US, according to the market research company, Euromonito­r Internatio­nal.

To regulate this behemoth, improved nutrition labelling, restrictio­ns on marketing (for example, a ban on advertisin­g and promoting junk food to children), and targeted taxation on high sugar, salt and fat products must be made public health priorities to lower dietrelate­d chronic diseases including obesity, diabetes, heart disease and kidney disease.

With the FSSAI’S draft food labelling regulation is expected to take at least a year to get operationa­l — six months to be finalised and six months for industry compliance — the food regulator has urged packaged food majors to voluntaril­y reformulat­e their products to reduce salt, sugar and fat levels before the new labelling regulation­s are implemente­d. Companies including HUL, Nestle India, Baggry’s, Britannia, MTR, Patanjali, Halidram , ITC, Kellogg’s, Kraft Heinz India, Bikano, MTR, Fieldfresh Foods (Del Monte), Marico and Weikfield have committed to lower unhealthy content, but FSSAI needs to go ahead with strong labelling regulation to ensure false claims and misleading omissions do not occur.

Globally, government­s are pushing for more transparen­cy in labelling. Food majors with US$10 million or more in annual food sales will have to use the US Food and Drug Administra­tion’s updated nutrition informatio­n on product labels by January 1, 2020, and smaller companies by 2021. The updated nutrition fact labels have better displayed calorie counts, updated percentage daily intake values, reported of added sugar content and realistic serving size sizes. Despite opposition from vested industry groups, the US FDA has made it mandatory for chain restaurant­s to print the calorie counts of dishes on menus from May 7.

Europe is promoting frontof-pack labelling and colourcode­d ratings based on levels of fat, saturated fat, sugar, and salt to give the nutritiona­l value at a glance. France has been using a colour-coded front-of-pack label called Nutri-score since late 2017, while the UK has traffic-light labelling since 2013, but both systems are voluntary, not mandatory.

India, too, needs robust regulation to ensure manufactur­ers reformulat­e to make existing products healthier and strong labelling standards to guide consumers make healthier choices.

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