Articles features
Maggi banned but what about oil, eggs, vegetables, pulses
New Delhi, June 6
Maggi two-minute noodles is only the latest food item
to be found violative of food-safety standards in India. Consider this:
64 percent of loose edible oils sold in Mumbai is adulterated, according
to a study conducted last year by the Consumer Guidance Society of
India.
The study tested 291 samples of sesame oil, coconut
oil, groundnut oil, mustard oil, sunflower oil, cottonseed oil and
soybean oil. This apart, arsenic above “critical limits†was found in
cereals, pulses, vegetables, roots and tubers. Cadmium above similar
criticality was found in cereals, fruits and curd, in a 2013 MS
University of Baroda study. Both heavy metals are toxic to human beings.
Looking
at other items, 28 percent of eggs sampled in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly,
Dehradun and Izatnagar towns were contaminated with E. coli (effects
are said to include diarrhoea, urinary and respiratory infections and
pneumonia) and 5 percent with multi-drug resistant salmonella bacteria
(Effects: diarrhoea, fever, cramps), according to this 2013 study by the
Indian Veterinary Research Institute.
More than half of all duck
eggs -- a local staple in Kerala -- sampled in the prosperous town of
Kottayam were contaminated with salmonella, according to this 2011
study. Nearly 69 percent of 1,791 milk samples in a nationwide study did
not conform to Indian standards (though they weren’t necessarily
unsafe). Milk, as IndiaSpend reported earlier, is one of the
most-commonly adulterated food items in India, followed by oil and eggs.
As
one can see, we are surrounded by food that is contaminated,
adulterated and does not meet Indian safety and packaging standards.
What we have presented to you is only a sampling of recent studies on
Indian foodstuff.
Why did Maggi hit the headlines? Maggi’s case
-- given its popularity -- is playing out in a blaze of publicity, as
more states ban the noodles and has now been withdrawn from the Indian
market by its manufacturer Nestle India.
“The trust of our
consumers and the safety of our products is our first priority.
Unfortunately, recent developments and unfounded concerns about the
product have led to an environment of confusion for the consumer, to
such an extent that we have decided to withdraw the product off the
shelves, despite the product being safe,†said an official statement by
Nestle India.
“This is a very serious issue as it concerns the
safety of consumers. Therefore, for the first time, the government has
suo motu complained to the Consumer Commission to take cognisance of the
matter on behalf of a class of consumers,†Consumer Affairs Minister
Ram Vilas Paswan said.
The move comes after product samples
analysed by Food Safety and Drug Administration (FDA), Uttar Pradesh
were found three times above safe limits.
The permissible limit
of lead in food items like Maggi is 2.5 parts per million (ppm),
according to food safety regulations of 2011. Maggi samples analysed by
the Uttar Pradesh watchdog were found to have lead concentration nearly
seven times higher at 17.2 ppm, raising fears of possible lead poisoning
among consumers.
The findings of the Uttar Pradesh regulator
prompted several states to conduct similar tests on Maggi. Sevral states
have not only banned Maggi but also other brad of instant noodles.
Since health is a state subject, states have their own regulators to
test if the foodstuff adhere to safety regulations.
Yet, lead
isn’t only in food. And foodstuff isn’t the only item that violates
safety standards. The air you breathe, the water you drink, even your
walls could hold the main toxin that Maggi noodles are suspected to
contain.
Lead is also present in household paint. A third of
enamel paints analysed had lead concentration above 10,000 ppm -- 111
times more than the prescribed norm of 90 ppm by the Bureau of Indian
Standards (BIS), according to a recent study by Toxics Link. The study
tested 101 enamel paints, of which 32 paints revealed high lead
concentrations. All 32 paints were made by small and medium enterprises.
Lead
and other carcinogenic heavy metals have also been commonly found in
everything from spinach in Delhi and Nagpur to brinjal, tomato and beans
in West Bengal. Indeed, there are few vegetables that do not display
lead contamination, primarily deposited from vehicular exhaust, as this
2013 study of carrot, radish, beet, cabbage and other vegetables in West
Bengal revealed.
But one is also unclear about how MSG crept
into Maggi. Besides lead, high levels of mono-sodium glutamate (MSG), a
taste enhancer, was also found in Maggi.This is a product widely used in
what is called “Indian-Chinese†food.
MSG should not be added
to “pastas and noodles (only dried products)â€, according to Food Safety
and Standards Rules, 2011. Similarly, glutamate is one of the most
common, naturally, occurring non-essential amino acid, which is found in
tomatoes, parmesan cheese, potatoes, mushrooms, and other vegetables
and fruits.
MSG is “generally recognised as safe†by U.S Food
and Drug Administration, though it is considered harmful in India. Major
complaints arising from MSG use include burning sensations of the
mouth, head and neck, headaches, weakness of the arms or legs, upset
stomach and hives or other allergic-type reactions with the skin.
Maggi
is the most recognisable instant noodle brands in India. This could
justify the nationwide uproar against revelations of adulteration. This
also raises fear of several other food items being adulterated.
The
bottom line also is India has not kept pace with its toxins. Detection
is crucial to counter the growing problem of food adulteration, but the
country has not established enough testing laboratories.
But as
IndiaSpend finds, India has only 148 food-testing laboratories. This
means, each laboratory serves 88 million people. China, by contrast, has
one laboratory for every 0.2 million people.
The percentage of
food samples found not conforming to the regulations increased from
12.77 percdnt in 2011-12 to 18.80 percent in 2013-14 -- a six
percentage-point increase over three years, as per national food
watchdog data.
So, while products are violating safety norms,
government agencies have also cracked down on violators. The number of
convictions in food-adulteration cases increased from 764 in 2011-12 to
3,845 in 2013-14 -- a 403 percent rise. But does this data provide the
full picture?
(In arrangement with IndiaSpend.org, a
data-driven, non-profit, public-interest journalism platform, with which
Abheet Singh Sethi is an analyst. The views expressed are personal).