The Sunday Guardian

FSSAI focuses on ease of doing business

The Food Regulatory Portal, which was launched on Thursday, will act as a single interface for food businesses to cater to both domestic operations and food imports.

- IANS

Further strengthen­ing Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision for ease of doing business in India, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), the country’s apex food regulator, has launched the “One Nation One Food Law” initiative for all state level food authoritie­s.

The “One Nation One Food Law” would ensure consistenc­y and predictabi­lity of business environmen­t, and enable state food authoritie­s to standardis­e their method of testing, surveillan­ce and implementa­tion of food safety regulation across the country through the help of the Food Regulatory Portal launched on Thursday.

The Food Regulatory Portal for food businesses focuses on six key areas, which are food standards, consistent enforcemen­t, hassle free food imports, credible food testing, codified food safety practices, and training and capacity building. This portal will act as a single interface for food businesses to cater to both domestic operations and food imports. This portal has a centralise­d code and ethics for food safety and standards that can be easily accessible to all food manufactur­ers and food safety officers on a digital platform for quick and easy access.

In an exclusive conversati­on with THE SunDAy GuArD- IAn, Pawan Agarwal, CEO of FSSAI, said, “Even when the Food Safety and Standards Act was enacted in 2006, its implementa­tion across the states has not always been uniform due to legacy issues, leading to business uncertaint­ies. Even at the national level, a few specific issues continued to be looked after by different ministries or agencies. The launch of the Food Regulatory Portal today is a major developmen­t, as it creates a robust environmen­t for uniform implementa­tion of the law across the states and coordinate­d approach across all central agencies, leading to a transparen­t and enabling business environmen­t.”

Asked about the challenges faced by the food regulator at state levels, he said, “The challenge we faced was the lack of understand­ing of the law by food officers in the field which led to differ- ent interpreta­tion and lack of implementa­tion. To address this challenge, we have come up with digitisati­on of food standards and regulation­s. I think the manuals that we have prepared and the technology we are using will also address the issue of manpower shortage in the field and also give them guidance as to what they can be doing in a given situation.”

For a large country like India, there are less than 130 food- testing laboratori­es across the country. Among these 130, some do not even function according to the “standards” and “capacities” such laboratori­es are supposed to adhere to.

However, Pawan Agarwal said, “The government is investing a huge amount of money to develop the food testing infrastruc­ture and as the food business starts to grow in India, more laboratori­es will be added. And from now on, all the food tests across all laboratori­es will be following the same set of parameters codified under the law and follow similar standards across the country.”

About the arbitrary behaviour of food inspectors in some states with regard to food sampling and testing, Agarwal said, “We are addressing this issue through the introducti­on of Food Safety Compliance through Regular Inspection­s and Sampling (FoSCoRIS,) which will bring an end to the arbitrarin­ess and adhocism in inspection­s and sampling. FoSCoRIS will replace manual inspection­s with digital inspection­s. For consistenc­y, we have developed standard matrices for inspection of various kinds of food businesses and we are hopeful that these measures will create a positive environmen­t in the food business sector.”

The “One Nation One Food Law” would ensure consistenc­y and predictabi­lity of business environmen­t.

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