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Food Safety & Standard Consultants - Food Project Consultants. - Total food solution providers.
Saturday, 22 December 2018
FSSAI planning to have presence in more entry points, especially ports
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Sunday, 23 September 2018
FSSAI includes beans, cauliflower & spinach in frozen veg regulations
| Friday, 21 September, 2018, 08 : 00 AM [IST] | ||
Shraddha Joshi, Mumbai
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Monday, 21 May 2018
FSSAI to revamp licensing and registration regulations under FSS Act
| Monday, 21 May, 2018, 08 : 00 AM [IST] |
Ashwani Maindola, New DelhiFSSAI has decided to revamp the whole licensing and registration regulations under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, which shall focus more on raising the bar for food safety compliance instead of just the documentation by means of licensing and registration.In the recently-held meeting of the Central Advisory Committee, the apex food regulator of the country, has decided to review the regulations and restructure it in a way that would ensure more compliance form the FBOs. For that, the first thing FSSAI plans to do is recategorise the FBOs according to the annual turnover to lower the bar for entry into the food safety ecosystem.According to FSSAI’s review document, the proposed limit for registration under Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, has been set at Rs 20 lakh, which is currently at Rs 12 lakh,which means now FBOs with a turnover of upto Rs 20 lakh require to only register with FSSAI. Besides, the regulator has proposed to create three categories of licenses. While Level A (for FBOs whose turnover is between Rs 20 lakh and Rs 5 crore) and Level B (for FBOs whose turnover is between Rs 5 crore and Rs 75 crore) licenses will be issued by the state licensing authorities, the third category (Level C) is for FBOs whose turnover is over Rs 75 crore, and their licenses will be issued by the Central licensing authority. However, if a food business has premises located in two or more states, it has to apply for a Level C license, irrespective of the turnover under the proposed draft. Further, entry into licensing and registration has been made easier under the draft, which stated that the registration to be issued on the basis of self-declaration without inspection. For low-risk category, the license would be issued after the submission of documents, while for high-risk category, the issuance of license is subject to inspection along with documentation. Registrations will be issued for a period of five years and licenses for three years. Further, draft proposal pushes for the simplification of the kinds of businesses as well, with seven categories, including manufacturing [which covers general food business operators (FBOs), milk, meat, fish and food supplements]. The other kinds include storage, transport, trade, retail (both general and e-commerce), food services (both general and e-commerce) and imports. The focus of FSSAI has been for some time to increase the level of compliance and awareness about the requisites under the regulations with regards of food safety ecosystem. It has also been come to the notice of the regulator that despite having registration or license, FBOs often lack even in the basic subjects, like sanitation and hygiene. In the meeting, it has been decided that the FSSAI headquarters shall be responsible for ensuring the compliance through a direct monitoring system on real-time basis, as all other FBOs’ premises will be linked with the head office for the purpose. The document added that inspection shall take place once a year by the authority or third party. It also spoke about the transition. The proposal has stated that new licenses and registration will be issued to the FBOs for the remaining period of validity without any fees. source |
Thursday, 5 October 2017
KFC to train street food vendors in city
In the first phase, KFC would train about 500 street food vendors in city during the next five months.
PTI | October 04, 2017, 17:03 IST
KFC will train 500 street food vendors in the city under the 'Clean Street Food' campaign of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India and be the first quick service restaurant to take up the initiative.
KFC will train 500 street food vendors in the city under the 'Clean Street Food' campaign of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India and be the first quick service restaurant to take up the initiative.
"this initiative is aimed at capability building among the unorganised sector which will disseminate content of FSSAI's Clean Street Food campaign..", a company statement said.
In the first phase, KFC would train about 500 street food vendors in city during the next five months.
"We consider food safety as a shared responsibility among food regulators and industry players. Through this initiative, we hope to contribute to the larger objective of ensuring health, hygiene and safety standards for consumers," KFC IndiaManaging Director, Rahul Shinde said.
"..we are looking at training 500 street vendors in Chennai over the next five months", he said.
Shinde said the company would consider expanding the programme to other States based on the response from Tamil Nadu.
On the initiative taken by KFC, FSSAI CEO Pawan Agarwal said, "I am happy to see several responsible businesses are coming on-board to support FSSAI's larger set of capability building priorities".
The training would focus on key aspects of hygiene, food handling, waste disposal and pest control to help street food vendors adopt food safety practices while serving safe food to consumers.
Upon completion of the training, the food vendors would receive a certification of completion of FoSTaC (Food Safety Training and Certification) training, the release added.
Wednesday, 15 February 2017
FSSAI constitutes scientific panel on food fortification and nutrition
| Wednesday, 15 February, 2017, 08 : 00 AM [IST] | ||
Ashwani Maindola, New Delhi
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Tuesday, 14 February 2017
FSSAI logo cannot be used to sell products or denounce rival products
| Monday, 13 February, 2017, 08 : 00 AM [IST] |
| Ashwani Maindola, New Delhi |
| With many brands using the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) logo to sell their products, notably Patanjali and Dabur, the apex regulator has issued a clarification that its logo can’t be used to sell any product, and that it is not a means for rival companies to denounce their competitors’ products. The apex food regulator has issued an order directing all food business operators (FBOs) to refrain from using its logo to justify their products, and reiterated that all products manufactured, stored, distributed, sold and imported were required to conform to the standards prescribed by it. FSSAI added, “It is directed that the display of FSSAI logo and name in labels and advertisements in any form should not be used to misrepresent the regulator or to suggest that it endorses any particular FBO, company, organisation or product.” It further says that the logo is only allowed to be used as per the food safety standards packaging rules and regulations. According to a senior official with FSSAI, “There have been numerous representations made to FSSAI with regards to such acts wherein companies were involved in justifying their products with the display of FSSAI’s name and logo and that their products were approved and endorsed by FSSAI.” “However, it wasn’t the case, and according to the rules and regulations, putting the logo and license number on packaged food commodity is mandatory under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.” It has been learnt that FSSAI has been working on the subject for several months. source |
Sunday, 5 February 2017
Hain Celestial, Future Group launch India joint venture
By Katy Askew | 20 January 2017
Hain Celestial, Future Group launch India joint venture
US natural food maker Hain Celestial has entered into a joint venture to expand its brands in the Indian market with Future Consumer Ltd (FCL), the consumer products division of Indian conglomerate Future Group.
Hain Celestial, via its local unit Tilda Hain India , and FCL will work together to pursue "joint interests" in food marketing and development in the country. The US group has a presence in India with products including Tilda rice.
The joint venture will manufacture, market and distribute "better-for-you" natural and organic products across "various categories" including snacks, plant-based alternatives and toddler and kids foods. The business will utilise existing Hain Celestial brands, such as Terra, Garden of Eatin', Sensible Portions, Dream and Earth's Best. Hain Tilda will continue to manufacture and market brands under the Tilda brand.
Announcing the tie-up, Hain Celestial stressed that Future Group operates "multiple retail formats" in India and suggested that the deal will help the company expand distribution in the market.
"Rajnish Ohri, our managing director in India, and his team will work together with Future Group to provide us with an opportunity to grow distribution of Hain Celestial's brands and products throughout India with its growing population and our focus on families in a more meaningful way," Hain Celestial founder, president and CEO Irwin Simon suggested.
Kishore Biyani, group CEO of Future Group, added the venture will expand its offering of "healthful" products in the natural and organic sector. "Hain Celestial is one of the most respected companies in the organic and natural segment, and we are excited to establish this partnership with Hain Tilda in India. Together, we will be able to provide Indian consumers with products that set the standards for good taste and are healthful too," he commented.
Hain Celestial, Future Group launch India joint venture
US natural food maker Hain Celestial has entered into a joint venture to expand its brands in the Indian market with Future Consumer Ltd (FCL), the consumer products division of Indian conglomerate Future Group.
Hain Celestial, via its local unit Tilda Hain India , and FCL will work together to pursue "joint interests" in food marketing and development in the country. The US group has a presence in India with products including Tilda rice.
The joint venture will manufacture, market and distribute "better-for-you" natural and organic products across "various categories" including snacks, plant-based alternatives and toddler and kids foods. The business will utilise existing Hain Celestial brands, such as Terra, Garden of Eatin', Sensible Portions, Dream and Earth's Best. Hain Tilda will continue to manufacture and market brands under the Tilda brand.
Announcing the tie-up, Hain Celestial stressed that Future Group operates "multiple retail formats" in India and suggested that the deal will help the company expand distribution in the market.
"Rajnish Ohri, our managing director in India, and his team will work together with Future Group to provide us with an opportunity to grow distribution of Hain Celestial's brands and products throughout India with its growing population and our focus on families in a more meaningful way," Hain Celestial founder, president and CEO Irwin Simon suggested.
Kishore Biyani, group CEO of Future Group, added the venture will expand its offering of "healthful" products in the natural and organic sector. "Hain Celestial is one of the most respected companies in the organic and natural segment, and we are excited to establish this partnership with Hain Tilda in India. Together, we will be able to provide Indian consumers with products that set the standards for good taste and are healthful too," he commented.
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