PESTICIDES IN FOOD - ECONOMY
News: The Food
Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has urged states to
establish an inter-ministerial committee to focus on reducing pesticide use and
developing strategies to regulate pesticide at the farmer level.
What’s in the news?
Benefits of Pesticides
- Increased
Crop Yields: By controlling pests that damage
crops, pesticides help farmers achieve higher yields and more reliable
harvests.
- Economic
Efficiency: Pesticides reduce crop losses,
which in turn lowers food prices and increases the profitability of
farming.
- Disease
Prevention: Some pesticides control vectors
like mosquitoes, which are responsible for spreading diseases such as
malaria and dengue fever.
- Weed
Control: Herbicides, a type of
pesticide, effectively manage weed populations that compete with crops for
nutrients and water.
Issues
- Ecological
Impact: Pesticides can harm non-target
species, including beneficial insects like bees, butterflies, and
predatory insects that help control pest populations naturally.
- Soil
Health: Prolonged use of pesticides can
degrade soil health by killing microorganisms essential for soil
fertility.
- Water
Contamination: Pesticides can leach into
groundwater or run off into surface water bodies, causing
contamination.
- Human
Health Risks:Pesticides, when used excessively or
inappropriately, can leave harmful residues in food
products, posing significant health risks to consumers.
·
These risks include acute
poisoning, endocrine disruption, and long-term effects such as cancer
and neurological disorders
Governments Steps
- Food
Safety on Wheels: The FSSAI’s emphasis
on regulating pesticide use aligns with global standards to minimize these
risks and promote public health.
- The FSSAI
has highlighted the need to identify key locations within states where
mobile labs, known as “Food Safety on Wheels,”can be
deployed.
- These mobile
labs will play a crucial role in raising consumer awareness and
disseminating vital information about food safety practices.
- Maximum
Residue limit (MRLs) of pesticides : MRLs of
pesticides are fixed differently for different food commodities based
on their risk assessments.
- Insecticide
Act, 1968 : Pesticides are regulated by the
Ministry of Agriculture through the Central Insecticide Board and
Registration Committee (CIB & RC) constituted under the Insecticide
Act, 1968.
·
The CIB & RC regulate the
manufacturing, import, transport, storage of pesticides and accordingly the
pesticides are registered/ banned/restricted by CIB & RC.
- The
Food Safety Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) increased the maximum
residue limit (MRL) of pesticides in herbs and spices from 0.01
milligrammes per kilogramme (mg / kg) to 0.1 mg / kg.
·
MRLs fixed by CODEX for spices and
culinary herbs range from 0.1 to 80 mg/kg.
- FSSAI
aligns with the updated standards of MRLs set by Codex
Alimentarius Commission (an International Food Safety and Quality
Standard setting body created by WHO and FAO of UN) and the European
Union.
- Anupam
Verma Committee: It was constituted by the
Department of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare to review 66
pesticides which are banned/restricted in other countries but
continued to be registered for use in India.
- Organic
farming: Organic farming avoids the use of
pesticides which results in food products that are free from harmful
chemical residues with higher levels of essential nutrients.
·
The government is promoting use of biopesticides,
which are generally safer than chemical pesticides.
- FSSAI
has also asked State Food Safety Commissioners to undertake an awareness
campaign on pesticides/insecticides residues in fruits and
vegetables.
Conclusion and Way Forward
- Pesticides
remain a vital tool in modern agriculture, contributing to food security
and economic stability.
- However,
their use must be carefully managed to balance agricultural productivity
with environmental sustainability and human health.
Source: https://www.business-standard.com/industry/agriculture/fssai-emphasises-need-to-prohibit-use-of-pesticides-to-ensure-food-safety-124082301065_1.html