FSSAI to crack down on misuse of terms like ‘fresh’, ‘natural’, ‘traditional’

24 Nov 2017

The union health ministry has proposed changes in the law to restrict the use of terms such as 'fresh', 'natural', 'original' and 'traditional' in advertisements for food products.

A draft notification has been prepared by the Food Safety and Security Authority of India (FSSAI), which says among other things that the words 'fresh' or 'freshly' may have no other connotation than the immediacy of the action being described.

For instance, the word 'fresh' can be applied to the products that have not been subjected to any process in any manner, except washed, peeled, chilled, trimmed and put through processing necessary for making it safe for consumption, without altering its basic characteristics.

''We are coming out with this draft notification to stop misleading ads and claims. It had been in the pipeline for some time to ensure people are not fooled in the name of natural and fresh food,'' FSSAI chief executive Pawan Agarwal told The Hindustan Times.

''Our aim is to benefit consumers and promote food that is safe for consumption. There should not be any misleading promotions.''

According to the draft, which has been seen by IANS and other media, a food containing additives or subjected to packaging, storing or any other supply chain processes that control freshness shall not be termed 'freshly stored' or freshly packed'.

It also seeks to restrict the use of the word 'natural' to foods derived from a deemed source like a plant, animal, mineral or micro-organism, to which nothing has been added.

"Compound foods shall not themselves be described directly or by implication as natural but such foods may be described as 'made from natural ingredients'. This will also apply to words such as 'real' and 'genuine', when used in place of 'natural' in such a way as to imply similar benefits. Provided however, claims such as 'natural goodness', 'naturally better' and 'nature's way' shall not be used," says the draft proposal, which is now up for suggestions from stakeholders before it is finalised.

The term 'traditional' can only be used to describe a recipe, fundamental formulation or processing method for a product that has existed for a significant period running over generations.

The term 'original' shall only be used to describe a food which is made to a formulation, the origin of which can be traced and that has remained unchanged over time.

The draft that has five schedules mentioning the restrictions also deals with the health claims of the products. According to the draft the claim that a food has certain nutritional or health attributes shall be scientifically substantiated by validated methods of quantifying the ingredient or substance that is the basis for the claim.

"All disclaimers related to a claim shall appear in the same field of vision. No claim or promotion of sale, supply, use and consumption of articles of foods shall be made using FSSAI logo and license number. Advertisements shall also not undermine the importance of healthy lifestyles," the draft says.