Kuwait Times

India inspects spice firms after foreign bans

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MUMBAI: India’s government spice board has launched factory inspection­s of two top companies in the wake of foreign bans following accusation­s some products were tainted with pesticides, media reports said Tuesday.

India is a key spice producer making up some 12 percent of global exports, totaling $4.25 billion last year, according to the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI). The Spices Board of India launched checks at processing plants of popular producers MDH and Everest - together making up more than a quarter of India’s market - to ensure that they meet global standards, the Economic Times reported.

Both companies deny their spices pose a health risk, and MDH last month said the claims were “untrue and lack any substantia­ting evidence”. Last week Nepal became the latest jurisdicti­on to impose bans on the import and sale of some spice products by the two brands, following restrictio­ns imposed by both Hong Kong and Singapore.

Restrictio­ns were slapped on after tests detected the presence of ethylene oxide, according to media reports. Besides its use as a pesticide, ethylene oxide is used as a sterilizin­g agent in spices to prevent illnesses caused by salmonella and E.coli bacteria.

Regular exposure to the colorless and odorless compound increases the “risk of cancers of the white blood cells”, according to the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency. There was no immediate response from the Spices Board, and the media reports did not specify exactly when the factory checks began. But the reported checks come after the board earlier this month ordered exporters to “test raw materials, processing aids, packaging materials and finished goods” for ethylene oxide contaminat­ion.

It urged producers to avoid use of ethylene oxide for sterilizat­ion and switch to “alternate methods” including steam. Major importers including Australia, Britain and the United States have also demanded additional informatio­n or are considerin­g extra quality control measures, Indian media have reported. Earlier this month, the GTRI research body warned that should key importer China follow suit, Indian spice exports “could see a dramatic downturn”. – AFP

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