FSSAI to bring new regulations for organic foods

NEW DELHI: The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) will soon come out with a draft regulation for organic foods to ensure safety across the value chain through proper certification of such products, a top official said today.

The food regulator also plans to make it mandatory for hotels and restaurants to keep one trained and certified food safety supervisor, FSSAI CEO Pawan Agarwal said.

For capacity building, the FSSAI today tied up with the Hotel and Restaurant Association of Northern India (HRANI) to launch its programme for training of master trainers.

"We are taking 360 degree approach to food safety and healthy nutrition to prevent food borne infections and disease and for complete nutrition for citizens everywhere at all times," Agarwal told reporters here.

To achieve this, he said the regulator has been taking various initiatives and issued new standards.

"We are soon coming out with regulations for organic food. Initial draft is now ready with us which has been prepared after consultations with various stakeholders," he said, adding the draft could be released this month.

There are some certification programmes for organic foods, he said, adding: "We are creating an umbrella regulations. Traceability is an important factor in organic foods market".

The draft would also propose setting up of a committee to suggest any change in the certification method being followed currently or need for a new certification system, he added.

Agarwal said the regulator is in final phase of national milk survey, noting that the "magnitude of problem is not as big".

On tie up with HRANI, he said the association will extend support to FSSAI towards organising a series of training sessions for Master Trainers, who would train food safety supervisors across 1,700 member organisations including hotels and restaurants across 9 Northern states.

This initiative aims at imparting required knowledge for carrying out implementation of hygiene standards in hotels & restaurants.

Agarwal also asked the association to explore feasibility of mentioning calorie and other nutritional value in the food menu of hotel and restaurants.

He said the regulator is also looking into the issue of multiplicity of regulatory bodies for restaurants and hotels.

Agarwal elaborated on various initiatives of FSSAI for spreading the message of food safety at different places like home, schools, work places and eating places.

To ensure proper food safety management system in places of worship, he said a team from Delhi will soon visit 20 temples in Tamil Nadu.

Agarwal talked about various consumer-facing initiatives including food safety connect for an integrated complaint redressal system and a water portal for checking the quality of packaged drinking water.
Stay on top of business news with The Economic Times App. Download it Now!
DON'T MISSany stories, follow us on TwitterFollow
FROM AROUND THE WEB

Promote content on Times of India network

Colombia

Breaking: Mumbai Man Drops 25kgs In 10 Days With 1 "Trick"

SlimNow

Save tax upto 46,350 u/s 80C with a term plan

HDFC Life

MORE FROM ECONOMIC TIMES

Infosys 'releases' 9,000 employees due to automation

Virat Kohli world's best in one-day cricket: Ricky Ponting

Corporate & Industry

From Around the WebMore from The Economic Times

Monthly SIPs that can make you rich

Fundsindia

Grab your favorite drape wear at flat 40% off

WforWomen

Epicure – The world of Taj awaits you

"Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces"

Say bye to TV addiction, here’s how

Magic Crate

It’s a rocky road ahead for V K Sasikala

Don't vote for SP-Congress alliance: Shia cleric to Muslims

Narayan Karthikeyan company looks to buy Inox Windfarms

Time will reveal who is backing Panneerselvam: V K Sasikala