- NEW DELHI — Health
experts on Friday welcomed the Supreme Court’s decision to make nutritional
labels on packaged foods mandatory.
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- Demanding clear nutritional information on packaged foods, a
bench of Justice J.B. Pardiwala and Justice R. Mahadevan, this week, set a
three-month deadline instructing the Centre to finalise and enforce updated
regulations on food labelling.
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- "In the distant past, each family prepared their own
food and had control over its ingredients. However, in the current era, a
significant portion of food consumed by any family is made by other people.
This means the consumer has little control over what exactly is consumed when
they purchase these food items outside. It is therefore crucial that the food
maker specifies all the ingredients on the label," Dr. Rajeev Jayadevan,
Convener, Research Cell, Kerala State IMA, told IANS.
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- In July 2024, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of
India (FSSAI) approved a proposal to make a bolder and bigger display of
nutritional information regarding total sugar, salt, and saturated fat on
packaged food items.
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- The proposal called for packaged food items to carry the
amount of total sugar, salt, and saturated fat "in bold letters and
relatively increased font size".
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- Meanwhile, the Centre has assured that the FSSAI has already
begun the process of revising the regulations, having received over 14,000
public comments on the proposed labelling norms.
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- The labelling "must be in a format that the common man
can understand", said Jayadevan.
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- In addition to packaged foods, the labelling norms must also
extend "from large scale manufacturers to roadside eateries that sell food
including snacks and namkeens", the expert said.
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- “It’s a welcome decision by the highest court of India. What
is needed is the FSSAI to quickly give India's 140 crore people a definition of
foods high in fat, sugar, and salt (HFSS), and work towards front-of-pack
labelling (FOPL) that indicates if sugar, salt, or fats are high," Dr Arun
Gupta, a paediatrician, told IANS.
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- "FSSAI should transparently make public the 14,000
public comments and its analysis in public," added Gupta, a Convener of
Nutrition Advocacy in Public Interest (NAPi) -- a national think-tank on
nutrition.