Eastern Eye (UK)

Pesticides stir up a storm in India teacup

EXCESSIVE CHEMICALS MAKE BREW ‘UNFIT FOR CONSUMPTIO­N’

- By CHANDRASHE­KAR BHAT

CONSIGNMEN­TS of Indian tea are being sent back because of the presence of excessive chemicals, amid fears they are unfit for consumptio­n.

Media reports last month said Taiwan and Iran sent back three containers of Indian tea, thwarting New Delhi’s efforts to fill the gap due to a shortage of supply from a crisis-hit Sri Lanka. India aims to export 220-225 million kg of tea this year, up from 196.54m kg last year.

The rejection of Indian consignmen­ts came after the Federation of All India Traders Associatio­ns (FAITTA) said various varieties of tea sold at auctions in India failed to meet the testing parameters set by the FSSAI (Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) and were therefore declared unfit for human consumptio­n.

In a communicat­ion to the Tea Board of India in May, it said the failure rates ranged between 15 per cent and 40 per cent because of the presence of chemicals beyond the maximum residue limits.

The FAITTA, which engages Eurofins Analytical Services for testing, said the teas which did not meet the standards could not be used in blends, packaged or retailed.

Expressing similar views, the India Tea Exporters Associatio­n (ITEA) said the rejection of consignmen­ts had hit the export of Indian tea.

ITEA chairman Anshuman Kanoria said most countries followed EU standards, which were more stringent than FSSAI regulation­s.

He criticised the calls for making Indian regulation­s more liberal, saying it would send a wrong signal as tea was considered a health drink.

The FSSAI is believed to have raided tea warehouses at random and found that much of India’s teas did not meet the standards required for human consumptio­n.

Newby Teas, which said it was the only tea brand in the world with a state-of-the-art packing and preservati­on to safeguard the character of its products, started a campaign in 2018 to expose the malpractic­e in the industry which adversely affected end consumers.

The UK-registered firm, whose products are approved by Eurofins, said because of its efforts, the Indian government chose to appoint the French testing services company to certify teas produced in India.

Nirmal Sethia, the chairman of Newby Teas, said he had complained about the presence of fluorides and pesticides in teas and the FSSAI’s decisions vindicated his position, according to a Hindustan Times report.

Sethia said Newby, which met both EU and US standards, “is the number one tea brand” in the world in terms of safety. He said because of the stringent measures Newby adopted to guarantee safety, the cost of production at the company was around twice that of other gardens.

He said other firms are reluctant to adopt similar measures.

Newby is part of the N Sethia Foundation and all its profits go to the British charity.

 ?? ?? SETBAC Much f India’ teas o not meet standard required or uman onsumption according to the ountry’s afet regulato
SETBAC Much f India’ teas o not meet standard required or uman onsumption according to the ountry’s afet regulato

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