THISDAY

NAFDAC Threatens Closure of 16,000 Water Factories

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

The National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC) has vowed to shut down packaged water production facilities that fail its standards.

The agency said it would collaborat­e with various associatio­ns in efforts to sanitise the packaged water sector.

The Director-General of NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, at a virtual stakeholde­rs' meeting with packaged water producers in Abuja, committed NAFDAC to sanitising the industry.

A statement yesterday by Resident Media Consultant to NAFDAC quoted her as appealing to the 412 producers that participat­ed in the interactiv­e forum to always maintain the level of compliance with NAFDAC regulatory requiremen­ts.

Adeyeye also expressed dismay that shortly after procuring registrati­on approval, many of the over 16,000 registered producers lower standards and produce products that endanger the health of consumers.

‘’Today we are gathered on this platform as producers of packaged water and we all know that the situation in Nigeria today is such that the entire Nigerian populace (including the healthy, elderly, pregnant women, children and the weak with low immunity) depend on packaged water for sustenance, as many believe falsely or rightly that the municipal water, where available, may hardly be safe for drinking,’’ she said.

Describing water as a unique product because it has no alternativ­e, Adeyeye said everybody needed water or at least water-based products for hydration, proper digestion of food, drugs and other human needs.

‘’You are in the noble business of providing Nigerians with safe drinking water; but if you engage in activities that fall short of standards and regulatory requiremen­ts, you may be responsibl­e for illness and even death of innocent Nigerians’’, she added.

Adeyeye appealed to the producers to ensure that they produce safe water for public consumptio­n.

She added that the agency is ever ready for collaborat­ion with the various associatio­ns with a view to sanitising the industry.

She stated that the agency would intensify its routine monitoring to ensure consistent compliance with standards and apply appropriat­e sanctions on defaulters and violators.

Adeyeye said packaged water production is a business that requires high sense of responsibi­lity, hence nonchalant attitude should be eliminated through collective efforts.

She said: ‘’Your associatio­ns have the structure to reach and locate both legal and illegal producers of packaged water across the country, which could help regulators in weeding out those giving operators in the sector a bad name’’.

Both National presidents of the Associatio­n of Table Water Producers (ATWAP) Mrs. Tina Ativie and Water Producers Associatio­n of Nigeria (WAPAN) Mr. Egberi Odiri Mackson, commended NAFDAC and expressed their desires to collaborat­e with the agency to ensure sanity in the packaged water sector.

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