NEW DELHI: Beware, your daily glass of good health could actually be doing you harm. As much as 70% of
milk samples picked up from the capital by a government agency failed to conform to standards.
Of the 71 samples randomly taken from Delhi for testing by the
Food Safety Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), 50 were found to be contaminated with glucose and
skim milk powder (SMP), which is usually added to milk in the lean season to enhance volumes.
Elsewhere in the 33 states and UTs study, milk was found adulterated
with detergent, fat and even urea, besides the age-old dilution with
water. Across the country, 68.4% of
the samples were found contaminated.
Only in Goa and Puducherry did 100% of the samples tested conform to
required standards. At the other end were West Bengal, Bihar,
Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa and Mizoram, where not a single sample
tested met the norms.
Other prominent states fared just a shade better. Around 89% of the samples tested from
Gujarat,
83% from Jammu & Kashmir, 81% from Punjab, 76% from Rajasthan, 70%
from Delhi and Haryana and 65% from Maharashtra failed the test. Around
half of the samples from Madhya Pradesh (48%) also met a similar fate.
States with comparatively better results included Kerala where 28% of
samples did not conform to the FSSAI standards, Karnataka (22%), Tamil
Nadu (12%) and Andhra Pradesh (6.7%).
The samples were
collected randomly and analysed from 33 states totaling a sample size of
1,791. Just 31.5% of the samples tested (565) conformed to the FSSAI
standards while
the rest 1,226 (68.4%) failed the test.
A study conducted by Food Safety Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)
across 33 states has found that milk was adulterated with detergent, fat
and even urea, besides the age-old practice of diluting it with water.
Across the country, 68.4% of the samples were found contaminated.
These were sent to government laboratories like Department of Food and
Drug Testing of Puducherry, Central Food Laboratory in Pune, Food
Reasearch and Standardization Laboratory in Ghaziabad, State Public
Health Laboratory in Guwahati and Central Food Laboratory, Kolkata, for
testing against presence of adulterants like fat, neutralizers, hydrogen
peroxide, sugar, starch, glucose, urea, detergent, formalin and
vegetable fat.
Detergent was found in 103 samples (8.4%). "This
was because milk tanks were not properly washed. Detergents in milk can
cause health problems," FSSAI official told TOI. The non-conforming
samples in rural areas numbered 381 (31%) out of which 64 (16.7%) were
packet milk and 317 (83.2%) were loose samples.
In urban areas,
the number of non-confirming samples were 845 (68.9%) out of which 282
(33.3%) were packed and 563 (66.6%) were loose.
The most common
adulteration was that of fat and solid not food (SNF), found in 574
(46.8%) of the non-conforming samples. This, scientists say, is because
of dilution of milk with water. The second highest parameter of
non-conformity was skim milk powder in 548 samples (44.69%) which
includes presence of glucose in 477 samples. Glucose could have been
added to milk probably to enhance SNF.
The report asked state
enforcement authorities to check whether the new FSSAI rules are being
complied with. An earlier first-of-its-kind study of milk boiling habits
that involved 2,400 women across eight major cities had found that
Chandigarh leads the pack in boiling milk, doing it more than three
times a day. While 84% women in Kolkata boiled milk for more than five
minutes, about 46% of women in Pune preferred to boil milk in high
temperatures. The study, by the Indian Medical Academy, said, "About 49%
boil milk more than thrice before consumption. Around 56% boil it for
more than 5 minutes, and 73% don't stir while boiling," said Dr Pawan
Gupta, IMA.
Times View This only
confirms that food adulteration is common in India. Even milk, consumed
primarily by children, isn't spared. What's particularly worrying is the
kind of substances used to adulterate, including toxic chemicals. This
shows the trade off between the risk of getting caught and the 'reward'
of huge profits is skewed heavily in favour of the latter. The
government must focus on raising the risks to the adulterator. One way
of doing this is by hiking the penalty, including making it analogous to
attempt to murder in extreme cases. It's equally important to regularly
check foodstuff for adulteration and ensure speedy trials.