Business Standard

For years, India’s food safety regulator has twisted rules to allow sale of unsafe processed food

By 2025, Indians are expected to eat processed food valued at ~72 trillion annually, while the revenues of the processed food industry forecast to touch ~60 trillion. Between 2012 and 2015, the industry tried to introduce nearly 4,500 products with comple

- KUMAR SAMBHAV SHRIVASTAV­A & NITIN SETHI 8 January Inarrangem­entwithScr­oll.in MORSEL MENACE

In December 2013, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), which is responsibl­e for ensuring that the food sold in the country is safe for consumers, granted permission to a company called Pushpam Foods and Beverages to sell an energy drink called Restless Ginseng.

Just under a year later, scientists at the food safety authority gave senior officials a piece of informatio­n that is well-recognised in the rest of the world: that caffeine and ginseng, the two key ingredient­s in Restless Ginseng, make for a dangerous cocktail that could increase heart rate and blood pressure.

It took the authority seven months to react. It was only in June 2015 that it withdrew the noobjectio­n certificat­e given to the company to sell the product. For a year and a half, the company was able to manufactur­e and sell a harmful product. Despite the authority’s action, Pushpam Foods continues to promote the drink on its website. The food safety authority has evidently failed to check whether the product has been withdrawn from the market.

As the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General of India (CAG) pointed out in a recent report, had the authority followed its own guidelines framed in 2011, products such as Restless Ginseng would not have been put in the market in the first place.

The guidelines required food firms to provide scientific evidence that their product is safe. Only after the authority’s scientists were satisfied was the product to be allowed into the market.

Dilutinggu­idelines

Restless Ginseng was not an exception. Starting from 2012, the authority has diluted its regulation­s, bypassed establishe­d protocols and ignored warning from its scientists to allow the sale of more than 800 processed foods with new formulatio­ns without assessing their safety. Some of these are still on the market.

The authority enabled this, the CAG noted, by diluting the 2011 guidelines to give temporary one-year no objection certificat­es to products even before its scientists had examined them.

The dilution goes against the provisions of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, mandating that only scientific panels can decide if a food product or food type is safe to consume.

The bureaucrat­s heading the authority can issue licences for food business operators to sell a product only after the scientists have approved it as safe.

Proprietar­yfoods

Restless Ginseng is one of hundreds of products that are sold as proprietar­y or novel foods – new formulatio­ns of processed food products for which safety standards do not exist in the 2006 Food Safety and Standards Act that applies to all packaged foods. The 2011 guidelines were formulated to regulate such foods.

Among these foods that do not have pre-set safety standards under the law are energy drinks,

salted snacks, noodles, soups and pasta. Also in this category are nutraceuti­cals — dietary supplement­s such as multivitam­ins that may improve health but do not treat a medical condition. Though such supplement­s might be sold by chemists, they are categorise­d as food, not medicine. By 2020, the nutraceuti­cal industry in India alone is expected to grow to ~260 billion, according to the Drug Marketing and Manufactur­ing Associatio­n.

CAG’sfindings

When the CAG did a test audit of 50 proprietar­y food products approved for sale to consumers between 2012 and 2014, it found that even the diluted regulation­s were not followed. In many cases, the authority did not send the product for scientific assessment even after giving it the temporary no-objection certificat­e. By April 2015, a note written by the authority’s chief executive in May 2015 shows, it had issued such certificat­es to over a thousand products but sent only 200 of them for testing.

In the case of at least four products, the authority continued to allow sale for up to 47 months after the scientists rejected them as unsafe. For some products, the authority did not cancel the no-objection certificat­es in time. Sometimes when it did cancel the certificat­e, it allowed the sales licence for the product to stand.

The CAG highlighte­d the case of a company called Chemical Internatio­nal that had received a noobjectio­n certificat­e to sell a mushroom-based nutraceuti­cal in August 2012. A month later, the authority’s scientists asked for the product to be banned as the company had not submitted clinical data about its claimed health benefits. But the authority did not cancel the licence for the product.

In August 2013, the safety authority gave a company called Surya Herbal a licence to sell Sunova Spirulina tablet. But since the company did not provide scientific evidence of the tablet’s safety, the scientific panel cancelled the no objection certificat­e in August 2014. Yet, the company continued to carry the licence to sell the tablet till December 2017. It still promotes Spirulina tablets on its website, though it could not be ascertaine­d if this is the same product that has been banned. The authority does not require companies to disclose such details on their websites.

Licenceraj

In 27 of the 50 cases audited by the CAG, the authority’s product approval unit had recommende­d referring the items to its scientific panels for assessment. But this was not done. Instead, the authority issued no-objection certificat­es to all the products.

Restless Ginseng is probably not the only potentiall­y harmful energy drink that the authority has allowed. The CAG said it was likely other companies besides Pushpam continue to sell drinks with the same dangerous concoction of ginseng and caffeine.

The authority has also granted the approvals arbitraril­y. In January 2013, it allowed the Indian biotech company Biocon to market its nutraceuti­cal tablet S-Adenosyl Methionine but denied permission to Sun Pharmaceut­ical Industries to sell the same product in August that year. Although Biocon’s product approval was withdrawn about a year later, the company continues to hold the licence to sell the nutraceuti­cal till May 2020.

This arbitrary clearance system was struck down when challenged before the Bombay High Court and its decision was validated by the Supreme Court in 2015.

With the clearance regime banned by the courts, the sale of proprietar­y food products should have stopped until a new system was put in place. But, the CAG found, a month after the judgement of the Bombay High Court, the food safety authority issued “blanket instructio­ns” to its licensing authoritie­s to renew or continue all existing licences issued on the basis of the noobjectio­n certificat­es it had already issued.

“Consequent­ly, FSSAI permitted the indefinite manufactur­e, distributi­on, sale or import of possibly unsafe foods,” the CAG said. “FSSAI did not take any action after the final orders of the Supreme Court to withdraw these blanket instructio­ns.” Despite this, the food authority, and the Union health and family welfare ministry which oversees it, have been dismissive of the CAG’s report. The main thrust of their defence is that it is old news and a new set of regulation­s has been put in place starting 2016.

Pawan Kumar Agarwal, the chief executive officer of the FSSAI, reiterated this to Scroll.in. “Product approval [under the guidelines the courts have done away with] is a thing of the past,” he said. “Why don’t you write a forwardloo­king article? The CAG report is not based on facts.” But the new regulation­s promise to be worse, shows an investigat­ion by Scroll.in, which found new evidence that had escaped even the CAG. The details will be reported in the second part of this series.

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PHOTO: REUTERS
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