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We are what we eat
What makes food unsafe?
• bad practices (poor hygiene, reliance on
  antibiotics and pesticides)
• unproven or risky technologies (genetic
  modification, nanotechnology, irradiation,
  cloning)
• deliberate contamination (such as tampering)
• just poor supervision,
• Genetic predisposition causing allergies, and
• Food habits including the combinations
Food is as safe as it is grown

            • What is sprayed comes to your
              plate

            • What is left comes into your
              bottle of water, tea, coffee,
              softdrink, packed or breast milk
Pesticides are poisons
         • Bhopal gas tragedy and Endosulfan
           poisoning in Kerala killed and
           effected lives of millions of people
           and poisoning continues
         • Nagarjuna chemicals in Srikakulam
         • During 2005 studies show that more
           than 500 people died spraying
           pesticides in Warangal district alone
         • Only 99 % of the pesticide sprayed
           is useless and spreads in air mixes
           in soil and water
         • CSE study showed that farmers
           blood in Punjab, Vegetables in
           Delhi, Hyderabad, soft drinks and
           bottled water across the country
           pesticide residues beyond toxic
           limits
         • Pesticides constitute 40% to 60% of
           Cost of Cultivation in many crops…
Pesticide residues in your food and water
           • Pesticides used in production of crops and
             storage are retained as residues in your food
           • Pesticide residues also contaminate all sources of
             fresh water, seen in bottled water and soft drinks
           • Body Burden defined as the total pesticide
             residue in a human is the highest in India
           • Breast milk has pesticide residues beyond
             tolerant limits
           • 51% of the food in India is contaminated with
             Pesticide Residues
           • Products like Chillies that are never washed
             contain heavy does of Pesticides in them
NIN found 18 pesticides in
   Hyderabad vegetables, Feb’ 2012
• Atrazine                   • Chlorfenvinphos
• Propanil                   • Diazinon
• Imidacloprid               • Phosalone
• Triazophos                 • Fenitrothione
• Ethion                     • Acephate
• Monochrotophos
                             • Simazine
• Quinalphos
                             • Malathion
• Metribuzin
                             • Alachlor
• Cholrpyrifos
                             • Aldicarb



     Binjal, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Tomato, Bendi
Bio-accumulation and Bio-magnification
• Bio-accumulation is the phenomenon when an organism absorbs a
  toxin at a rate greater than that at which the substance is lost. For
  instance, when the half life period (the time that it takes to
  disintegrate or get destroyed by half) is very long, bio-accumulation
  poses a greater risk of chronic poisoning by that toxin. Those chemicals
  that are lipid-soluble (fat-soluble) also create bio-accumulation
  especially in women with more fat-tissue, for example.
• Bio-magnification, on the other hand, is the increase in the
  concentration of a pesticide along the food chain (pesticides ending up
  in water bodies ending up in fish, eaten by birds, eaten further down
  by animals and then by humans etc.). The substances become
  concentrated in tissues or internal organs as they move up the chain.
  This phenomenon of buildup is usually connected with persistence,
  slow metabolisation and excretion often due to water insolubility etc.
• While bio-accumulation occurs within an organism, bio-magnification
  occurs across food chain
What reports say?
1999 AICRPPR Report had the following findings for instance:
• 20% samples exceed MRLs (all commodities included)
• Finds fruits, vegetables and milk to be highly contaminated
• In states like UP and Kerala, more than 40% fruits and vegetable samples
   exceeded MRLs – finds monocrotophos, DDVP and Methyl Parathion as
   most prevalent – all 3 WHO class I pesticides
• Finds 78% milk samples exceeding HCH MRL and 43.4% exceeding DDT
   MRL
2001 AICRPPR Report:
• Again finds high contamination levels in fruits and vegetables – 61%
   contaminated – 11.7% failed MRLs
• In milk, contamination still high – 15.2% failed HCH MRL and 7.7% failed
   DDT MRL.
• Finds new pesticides like Endosulfan, chlorpyrifos and chlorthalonil in
   milk.
Who regulates whom?
•  In 2003, CSE findings on pesticides in bottled water in India, followed by another
   analysis on pesticides in soft drinks
• Fourth time in Indian history and for the first time on health and food safety, a
   Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) was set up to look into Pesticide Residues in
   and Safety Standards for Soft Drinks, Fruit Juice and other beverages
• Ministry of Agriculture’s scheme called “Monitoring of Pesticide Residues at
   National Level” (started in 2005-06, with 21 labs representing various ministries)
The main findings of this monitoring scheme for 2010-2011 are:
• Out of a total of 15321 samples analysed, residues were detected in 1044 or 6.8%
   of samples; out of this, residues were detected above maximum residue limit in
   188 or 1.2% of samples.
• 11.5% of the 5170 vegetable samples were contaminated, with 2.3% being above
   MRL; only 0.9% of 2062 fruit samples were found to fail MRLs.
• None of the fish/other marine product samples or CTC tea or pulses samples or
   milk/meat/eggs/honey/soil samples were found to be contaminated.
• These findings however do not reflect or resonate with the findings from various
   independent studies from around the country, including from various
   government/public sector institutions.
GM foods
Skin Prick test
Skin Allergies with GM Soya
• To improve the nutritional
  quality, methionine-rich 2S                           Brazil nut allergin
  albumin from Brazilnut
  (Bertholletia excelsa) was
  introduced into soybeans
• Study shows that an allergen
  from a food known to be
  allergenic can be transferred
  into another food by genetic
  engineering


(Nordlee J A, Taylor S L, Townsend B S ,
Thomas L A & Bush R K, 1996: “Identification   Transgenic soya
of a Brazilnut allergen in transgenic
soybeans”, The New England Journal of
Medicine, Volume 334: 688-692)
Health Hazards: Various studies & instances

                                 1998: Arpad Puzstai’s study on GM
                                  Potatoes – change in organs (liver, heart,
         Intestinal Wall          brain) of rats & immune systems-CaMV
                                  promoter effect??
                                • Potentially pre-cancerous cell growth in
                                  the digestive tract
Non-GM                     GM
                                • Smaller brains, livers and testicles

          Stomach lining        • Partial atrophy of the liver, and
                                • Immune system damage
                                S. W. Ewen, A. Pusztai, 1999: “Effect of diets
                                   containing genetically modified potatoes
Non-GM                             expressing Galanthus nivalis lectin on rat
                                   small intestine” Lancet 354(9187):1353


                           GM
Health hazards…contd.
 1998: Monsanto & Russian Academy of Medical Sciences –
  GM Potatoes – higher organ & tissue damage: “Not safe to be
  used in the nourishment of people”
 [“Medical-biological investigations of transgenic potatoes, resistant to the Colorado beetle
   (under agreement with Monsanto Co.)”, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Institute of
       Nutrition, Moscow, 1998. Signed off by V.A.Tutelian, Deputy Director. Physiological,
     biochemical and morphological investigations in rats. Full Report 275 pp, including raw
                                              data.]

 1999: Journal of Medicinal Food – beneficial phytoestrogen
  compounds lower in GE soybeans – 12-14% lower
 [Marc Lappe, E. Britt Bailey, Chandra Childress, Kenneth D.R. Setchell, 1999: “Alterations in
  Clinically Important Phytoestrogens in Genetically Modified, Herbicide-Tolerant Soybeans”,
                     The Journal of Medicinal Food, Vol. 1:4, pps. 241-245]

 2001: Starlink Corn contamination – one billion dollars’ cost of
  recall….
Health hazards….
 2003: Terje Traavik – Filipinos & allergies (skin, respiratory,
  intestinal, with fever) – pollination of Bt corn field – blood
  tests showed an immune response
[Terje Traavik & Jeffrey Smith, 2004: “Bt-maize (corn) during pollination, may trigger
   disease        in       people        living      near        the        cornfield”,
   http://www.mindfully.org/GE/2004/Bt-Corn-Human-Disease24feb04.htm]


 2004: Nature biotechnology – only human feeding trial of GM
  crops – gene transfer from GM soy to human gut bacteria!
[Netherwood et al, “Assessing the survival of transgenic plant DNA in the human
  gastrointestinal tract,” Nature Biotechnology 22 (2004): 2]
 2005: Monsanto – Bt Maize – kidney abnormalities & high
  WBC levels
[Seralini et al, 2007: New Analysis of a Rat Feeding Study with a Genetically Modified
   Maize Reveals Signs of Hepatorenal Toxicity, Archives of Envir.l Contamination &
   Toxicology, Vol. 52, No 4 ]
 2005: Irina Ermakova – offspring
  of GM-soy-fed rats die – growth
  abnormalities
 Within three weeks, 25 of the 45
  (55.6%) rats from the GM soy
  group died compared to only 3
  of 33 (9%) from the non-GM soy
  group and 3 of 44 (6.8%) from
  the non-soy controls.
                Rat testicles

                                                  On the right is a 20-day old rat from GM
                                                  soy-fed study group and at left is a 19-day
                                                  old rat from control group
          Control      GM soy fed
Ermakova, I: Preliminary Findings presented at Symposium of National Association for
Genetic Security, October 10, 2005; also,
"Influence of genetically modified soya on the birth-weight and survival of rat pups" In
Proceedings of the Conference Epigenetics, Transgenic Plants & Risk Assessment,
Institute for Applied Ecology, Frankfurt, 2006, pp. 41-48
Health hazards…
 2005: University of Urbino - misshapen nuclei in liver cells of
  rats – dramatic reduction in enzyme production in pancreas –
  cells in liver, pancreas and testes affected
Malatesta M, Caporaloni C, Gavaudan S, Rocchi MB, Serafini S, Tiberi C, Gazzanelli G.
  (2002): “Ultrastructural morphometrical and immunocytochemical analyses of
  hepatocyte nuclei from mice fed on genetically modified soybean”, Cell Struct
  Funct. 27: 173-180; Manuela Malatesta, et al, (2002): “Ultrastructural analysis of
  pancreatic acinar cells from mice fed on genetically modified soybean”, Journal of
  Anatomy, Volume 201 Issue 5 Page 409

 Cooked GM soy is reported to contain twice the amount of
  soy lectin, which can also block nutrient assimilation
Stephen R. Padgette et al, 1996:, "The Composition of Glyphosate-Tolerant Soybean
   Seeds Is Equivalent to That of Conventional Soybeans," The Journal of Nutrition,
   vol. 126, No. 4
 2007: study done by Vavilov's Agrarian
       University in Russia: RoundUp Ready soy
       approved for human consumption in the
       Russian Federation and in many other
       countries, induced serious changes in the
       morphology of viscera (liver, kidney, testis)
       of mice, in their histological and cell
       structures. GM-soy also is found to impact
       the size of litters, and the mortality of the
       young.
      2011: A recent study from Canada
       published in the Journal ‘Reproductive
       Toxicology’ has shown that Bt proteins have
       survived the human digestive system and
       passed into the blood supply and found in
       the unborn babies (
       http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21338670
       ).
On top is a mouse fed with GM soya and at the bottom is one fed with non-GM soya, in this Russian study
Can there be a choice to consumer?
   Labelling still to be put in place
      How primary products like vegetables would be labelled ?
      Who is accountable ?
      In a country with more illiteracy how to implement ?

   Problems with detection due to
      Degradation of DNA
      High degree of processing
      Low amount of ingredient

   Highly Processed food
      May contain GMOs (oil, starch, glucose syrup)
      Detection not possible, no DNA left after processing

   Mixed processed food
      May contain GMOs in flour, or any other ingredient
       (e.g. cheese)
      Detection possible but in most cases very
       complicated, time consuming and expensive
How, what, who and where to detect ?
Food processing, storage

• Highly polished rice-
  diabetes
• Calcium carbide used
  in ripening
• Wax coated apples
• Transfats in edible
  oils
Food Adulteration
• Synthetic milk
• Metalic colors on
  greens
• Growth hormones to
  fruits and animals
• Animal oils
• Turmeric,
  chillipowder, tea
  adulteration
Changing Food Habits
•   Loosing diversity in food
•   Millets, minor fruits, vegetables disappearing
•   Unseasonal vegetable
•   Pizzas, softdrinks, icecreams
•   Unnatural combinations: cooldrinks/ice
    creams after fatty food
Junk food
• Junk food is bad for health
• It lacks nutrition and is loaded with empty calories
  (refined carbohydrates)
• High on Salt, Sugar and Fats, including Trans fat
• Unhealthy diet is one key cause of the growing global
  burden of disease-WHO
• Changing diet -- low on nutrients and high on salt,
  sugar and fat, are directly indicted to disease.
• Junk food is responsible for rising cases of obesity and
  non communicable diseases (NCDs) like cardiovascular
  diseases and diabetes
Salt in your food
• The amount of dietary salt consumed is an
  important determinant of blood pressure
  levels and overall cardiovascular risk.
• WHO recommends salt intake of less than 5
  grams per person per day; NIN recommends 6
  gm
• India has a serious salt problem; more than
  40% population consume above 10 gm/day
Nutritional guidelines
   •   Fats: 15-30% of total calories
   •   Trans fats: Max. 1% of total calories
   •   Carbohydrates: 55-75% of total calories
   •   Proteins: 10- 15% of total calories
   •   Sugar: 20-25 gm/day added sugar
   •   Salt: 5-6 gm/day
Person                Kilo       Carbohydrate Salt       Total fats   Transfats
                      calories   (gm/day)     (gm/day)   (gm/day)     (gm/day)
                      allowed/
                      day
Adult male            2,320      290-348      6.0        39-78        2.6
Adult female          1,900      263-315      6.0        35-70        2.1
Children (10-12 yr)   2,100      238-285      6.0        32-64        2.3
Potato chips
•   Total fats: 33 gm
•   Carbs: 57.5 gm
•   Trans fats:
•   0.6 gm (Bingo Oye Pudina)
•   3.7 gm (Lay’s American style cream & onion, March, 2012 batch)
•   Salt:
•   1.2 gm (Lay’s American style cream & onion
•   3.5 gm (Uncle chips Spicy Treat)

What these numbers mean?
Values per 100 gm
• Munching a standard-sized packet (65-75gm); finish about half of the daily fats
   quota.
• Munching a packet of Lays March, 2012 batch will exceed Trans fat quota
• And a packet of Uncle Chips Spicy Treat 60-70% salt quota

    Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Indian Snacks
Total fats: 36 gm
Carbs: 50 gm
Trans fats:
• 0.7 gm (Kurkure masala munch)
• 2.5 gm (Haldiram’s Aloo Bhujia)
Salt:
• 1.6 gm (Kurkure masala)
• 3.3 gm (Haldiram’s Aloo Bhujia)

What these numbers mean?

* Values per 100 gm
• Highly fatty food; Don’t eat too much Aloo Bhujia – will get heavy dose of salt and
   Trans fat
• Eating a packet of Kurkure will exhaust one-third of your calorie quota and two-
   third of your total fat quota

Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Carbonated drinks
Carbs:
• 14 gm (Pepsi Cola)
• 14.8 gm (Coca-Cola)

They say all of it is Sugar
What these numbers mean?
* Values per 100 gm
• A 300 ml bottle will have over 40 gm sugar;
  consumption of a single bottle will exhaust your
  added sugar quota almost twice over
Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Instant noodles
Total fats:
• 14 gm
Carbs:
• 72 gm
Trans fats:
• 0.6 gm (Masala Maggi)
• 0.7 gm (Top Ramen, Super Noodles)
Salt:
• 4.2 gm (Masala Maggi)
• 3.2 gm (Top Ramen, Super Noodles)

What these numbers mean?
* Values per 100 gm
• Highly salty food with lots of empty calories; 70% of calories is just from refined
    carbohydrates
• Eating a packet will exhaust more than half of your daily salt quota
   Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Burgers
•   Total fats: 10.5 gm in veg --- 13.5 gm in non-veg
•   Carbs: 33 gm in non-veg --- 43 gm in veg
•   Trans fats: 0.4 gm
•   Salt: 1.2 gm in non-veg – 1.8 gm in veg

What these numbers mean?
• Highly salty food with lots of empty calories; non-
  veg high on fat (40-45%); veg high on refined
  carbs (55%)
Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Fries
•   Total fats: 20 gm
•   Carbs: 56 gm
•   Trans fats: 1.6 gm
•   Salt: 0.4 gm; Add to taste

What these numbers mean?
• Rich in Trans fat; a medium fries (about 150
  gm) will exceed your safe limit for Trans fat
    Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Pizzas
• Total fats: 7 gm
• Carbs: 50 gm
• Trans fats: 0.1 gm
• Salt: 1 gm
* Values per 100 gm
What these numbers mean?
• Low on fat, salt and Trans fat; high on refined
  carbs --- only the basic version
 Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Chicken fries
•   Total fats: 23.4 gm
•   Carbs: 14 gm
•   Trans fats: 0.7 gm
•   Salt: 0.9 gm

What these numbers mean?
• A two piece KFC chicken (about 250 gm) will
  exceed your Trans fat and total fat
Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Carbs   sugar        fats

                                     r



                                       Transfats
                                             T         salts   % of daily need


• This meal will stuff you with fats and trans
  fats, and take care of 60-70% of your calorie
  requirement for the day
 Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Carbs   sugar        fats




                                       Transfats      salts   % of daily need




Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
Food Laws
Food laws in our country
 The Indian Parliament has recently passed the Food Safety and
 Standards Act, 2006 that overrides all other food related laws.
 Such as;
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954
     Fruit Products Order,1955

         Meat Food Products Order ,1973;
            Vegetable Oil Products (Control) Order, 1947

    Edible Oils Packaging (Regulation) Order 1988

 Solvent Extracted Oil, De- Oiled Meal and Edible Flour (Control)
 Order, 1967,
              Milk and Milk Products Order, 1992 etc are repealed
              after commencement of FSS Act, 2006.
2004
                                     2006
Commnity Managed Sustainable Agricutlure in
Andhra Pradesh
2004-05 started with 225 acres in one dist and
reached 7 lakh acres in 2007-08 in 18 dist. today
the prog covers 20 lakh acres in 18 dist
World Bank says this is a good tool for poverty
eradication
With 50 % development expenditure one can
double the incomes of the farmers
                                                    2009
Farmers and area covered under CMSA
                                              RKVY funds             MKSP funds




                    pilot                                            * Planned intervertion
                             CSA handholding support
                             NGOs technical support at field level

                                                    SHG groups ind. handling
…aiming to reach 100 lakh acres across crops in all districts of AP in by 2014
Who benefits from your purchase
           •   Farmer gets Rs 15 for each kg of rice you
               purchase at Rs 35

           •   Farmer gets Rs 30 for each Kg of Toor Dal you
               purchase at Rs 80

           •   In case of other foods the farmer’s share is
               similar or lesser.

           •   In processed foods farmers share is less than
               10% and the rest goes to the Industry,
               advertising and sales.

           •   Your purchases in retail chains go towards
               energy-hogging facilities like air-conditioned
               stores, cold storages and transportation all of
               which have a huge ecological cost.
YOUR CHOICES CAN IMPROVE YOUR
HEALTH, THE ENVIRONMENT AND
LIVELIHOODS
How your choice of food impacts
                livelihoods?
• What you buy is what is grown

• Where and from whom you buy determines the farmers’ share in
  your rupee

• Today farmers income is less than Rs. 20/- a day

• Perpetual losses and indebtedness is driving farmers suicide

• 16 of the 32 crisis ridden districts are in AP
My Home Garden
www.indiaforsafefood.in
www.csa-india.org
www.agrariancrisis.in
Facebook: ramoo.csa; indiaforsafefood

SAFE FARMING FOR SAFE FOOD

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We are what we eat 2.0

  • 1. We are what we eat
  • 2. What makes food unsafe? • bad practices (poor hygiene, reliance on antibiotics and pesticides) • unproven or risky technologies (genetic modification, nanotechnology, irradiation, cloning) • deliberate contamination (such as tampering) • just poor supervision, • Genetic predisposition causing allergies, and • Food habits including the combinations
  • 3. Food is as safe as it is grown • What is sprayed comes to your plate • What is left comes into your bottle of water, tea, coffee, softdrink, packed or breast milk
  • 4. Pesticides are poisons • Bhopal gas tragedy and Endosulfan poisoning in Kerala killed and effected lives of millions of people and poisoning continues • Nagarjuna chemicals in Srikakulam • During 2005 studies show that more than 500 people died spraying pesticides in Warangal district alone • Only 99 % of the pesticide sprayed is useless and spreads in air mixes in soil and water • CSE study showed that farmers blood in Punjab, Vegetables in Delhi, Hyderabad, soft drinks and bottled water across the country pesticide residues beyond toxic limits • Pesticides constitute 40% to 60% of Cost of Cultivation in many crops…
  • 5. Pesticide residues in your food and water • Pesticides used in production of crops and storage are retained as residues in your food • Pesticide residues also contaminate all sources of fresh water, seen in bottled water and soft drinks • Body Burden defined as the total pesticide residue in a human is the highest in India • Breast milk has pesticide residues beyond tolerant limits • 51% of the food in India is contaminated with Pesticide Residues • Products like Chillies that are never washed contain heavy does of Pesticides in them
  • 6. NIN found 18 pesticides in Hyderabad vegetables, Feb’ 2012 • Atrazine • Chlorfenvinphos • Propanil • Diazinon • Imidacloprid • Phosalone • Triazophos • Fenitrothione • Ethion • Acephate • Monochrotophos • Simazine • Quinalphos • Malathion • Metribuzin • Alachlor • Cholrpyrifos • Aldicarb Binjal, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Tomato, Bendi
  • 7. Bio-accumulation and Bio-magnification • Bio-accumulation is the phenomenon when an organism absorbs a toxin at a rate greater than that at which the substance is lost. For instance, when the half life period (the time that it takes to disintegrate or get destroyed by half) is very long, bio-accumulation poses a greater risk of chronic poisoning by that toxin. Those chemicals that are lipid-soluble (fat-soluble) also create bio-accumulation especially in women with more fat-tissue, for example. • Bio-magnification, on the other hand, is the increase in the concentration of a pesticide along the food chain (pesticides ending up in water bodies ending up in fish, eaten by birds, eaten further down by animals and then by humans etc.). The substances become concentrated in tissues or internal organs as they move up the chain. This phenomenon of buildup is usually connected with persistence, slow metabolisation and excretion often due to water insolubility etc. • While bio-accumulation occurs within an organism, bio-magnification occurs across food chain
  • 8. What reports say? 1999 AICRPPR Report had the following findings for instance: • 20% samples exceed MRLs (all commodities included) • Finds fruits, vegetables and milk to be highly contaminated • In states like UP and Kerala, more than 40% fruits and vegetable samples exceeded MRLs – finds monocrotophos, DDVP and Methyl Parathion as most prevalent – all 3 WHO class I pesticides • Finds 78% milk samples exceeding HCH MRL and 43.4% exceeding DDT MRL 2001 AICRPPR Report: • Again finds high contamination levels in fruits and vegetables – 61% contaminated – 11.7% failed MRLs • In milk, contamination still high – 15.2% failed HCH MRL and 7.7% failed DDT MRL. • Finds new pesticides like Endosulfan, chlorpyrifos and chlorthalonil in milk.
  • 9. Who regulates whom? • In 2003, CSE findings on pesticides in bottled water in India, followed by another analysis on pesticides in soft drinks • Fourth time in Indian history and for the first time on health and food safety, a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) was set up to look into Pesticide Residues in and Safety Standards for Soft Drinks, Fruit Juice and other beverages • Ministry of Agriculture’s scheme called “Monitoring of Pesticide Residues at National Level” (started in 2005-06, with 21 labs representing various ministries) The main findings of this monitoring scheme for 2010-2011 are: • Out of a total of 15321 samples analysed, residues were detected in 1044 or 6.8% of samples; out of this, residues were detected above maximum residue limit in 188 or 1.2% of samples. • 11.5% of the 5170 vegetable samples were contaminated, with 2.3% being above MRL; only 0.9% of 2062 fruit samples were found to fail MRLs. • None of the fish/other marine product samples or CTC tea or pulses samples or milk/meat/eggs/honey/soil samples were found to be contaminated. • These findings however do not reflect or resonate with the findings from various independent studies from around the country, including from various government/public sector institutions.
  • 11. Skin Prick test Skin Allergies with GM Soya • To improve the nutritional quality, methionine-rich 2S Brazil nut allergin albumin from Brazilnut (Bertholletia excelsa) was introduced into soybeans • Study shows that an allergen from a food known to be allergenic can be transferred into another food by genetic engineering (Nordlee J A, Taylor S L, Townsend B S , Thomas L A & Bush R K, 1996: “Identification Transgenic soya of a Brazilnut allergen in transgenic soybeans”, The New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 334: 688-692)
  • 12. Health Hazards: Various studies & instances  1998: Arpad Puzstai’s study on GM Potatoes – change in organs (liver, heart, Intestinal Wall brain) of rats & immune systems-CaMV promoter effect?? • Potentially pre-cancerous cell growth in the digestive tract Non-GM GM • Smaller brains, livers and testicles Stomach lining • Partial atrophy of the liver, and • Immune system damage S. W. Ewen, A. Pusztai, 1999: “Effect of diets containing genetically modified potatoes Non-GM expressing Galanthus nivalis lectin on rat small intestine” Lancet 354(9187):1353 GM
  • 13. Health hazards…contd.  1998: Monsanto & Russian Academy of Medical Sciences – GM Potatoes – higher organ & tissue damage: “Not safe to be used in the nourishment of people” [“Medical-biological investigations of transgenic potatoes, resistant to the Colorado beetle (under agreement with Monsanto Co.)”, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Institute of Nutrition, Moscow, 1998. Signed off by V.A.Tutelian, Deputy Director. Physiological, biochemical and morphological investigations in rats. Full Report 275 pp, including raw data.]  1999: Journal of Medicinal Food – beneficial phytoestrogen compounds lower in GE soybeans – 12-14% lower [Marc Lappe, E. Britt Bailey, Chandra Childress, Kenneth D.R. Setchell, 1999: “Alterations in Clinically Important Phytoestrogens in Genetically Modified, Herbicide-Tolerant Soybeans”, The Journal of Medicinal Food, Vol. 1:4, pps. 241-245]  2001: Starlink Corn contamination – one billion dollars’ cost of recall….
  • 14. Health hazards….  2003: Terje Traavik – Filipinos & allergies (skin, respiratory, intestinal, with fever) – pollination of Bt corn field – blood tests showed an immune response [Terje Traavik & Jeffrey Smith, 2004: “Bt-maize (corn) during pollination, may trigger disease in people living near the cornfield”, http://www.mindfully.org/GE/2004/Bt-Corn-Human-Disease24feb04.htm]  2004: Nature biotechnology – only human feeding trial of GM crops – gene transfer from GM soy to human gut bacteria! [Netherwood et al, “Assessing the survival of transgenic plant DNA in the human gastrointestinal tract,” Nature Biotechnology 22 (2004): 2]  2005: Monsanto – Bt Maize – kidney abnormalities & high WBC levels [Seralini et al, 2007: New Analysis of a Rat Feeding Study with a Genetically Modified Maize Reveals Signs of Hepatorenal Toxicity, Archives of Envir.l Contamination & Toxicology, Vol. 52, No 4 ]
  • 15.  2005: Irina Ermakova – offspring of GM-soy-fed rats die – growth abnormalities  Within three weeks, 25 of the 45 (55.6%) rats from the GM soy group died compared to only 3 of 33 (9%) from the non-GM soy group and 3 of 44 (6.8%) from the non-soy controls. Rat testicles On the right is a 20-day old rat from GM soy-fed study group and at left is a 19-day old rat from control group Control GM soy fed Ermakova, I: Preliminary Findings presented at Symposium of National Association for Genetic Security, October 10, 2005; also, "Influence of genetically modified soya on the birth-weight and survival of rat pups" In Proceedings of the Conference Epigenetics, Transgenic Plants & Risk Assessment, Institute for Applied Ecology, Frankfurt, 2006, pp. 41-48
  • 16. Health hazards…  2005: University of Urbino - misshapen nuclei in liver cells of rats – dramatic reduction in enzyme production in pancreas – cells in liver, pancreas and testes affected Malatesta M, Caporaloni C, Gavaudan S, Rocchi MB, Serafini S, Tiberi C, Gazzanelli G. (2002): “Ultrastructural morphometrical and immunocytochemical analyses of hepatocyte nuclei from mice fed on genetically modified soybean”, Cell Struct Funct. 27: 173-180; Manuela Malatesta, et al, (2002): “Ultrastructural analysis of pancreatic acinar cells from mice fed on genetically modified soybean”, Journal of Anatomy, Volume 201 Issue 5 Page 409  Cooked GM soy is reported to contain twice the amount of soy lectin, which can also block nutrient assimilation Stephen R. Padgette et al, 1996:, "The Composition of Glyphosate-Tolerant Soybean Seeds Is Equivalent to That of Conventional Soybeans," The Journal of Nutrition, vol. 126, No. 4
  • 17.  2007: study done by Vavilov's Agrarian University in Russia: RoundUp Ready soy approved for human consumption in the Russian Federation and in many other countries, induced serious changes in the morphology of viscera (liver, kidney, testis) of mice, in their histological and cell structures. GM-soy also is found to impact the size of litters, and the mortality of the young.  2011: A recent study from Canada published in the Journal ‘Reproductive Toxicology’ has shown that Bt proteins have survived the human digestive system and passed into the blood supply and found in the unborn babies ( http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21338670 ). On top is a mouse fed with GM soya and at the bottom is one fed with non-GM soya, in this Russian study
  • 18. Can there be a choice to consumer?  Labelling still to be put in place  How primary products like vegetables would be labelled ?  Who is accountable ?  In a country with more illiteracy how to implement ?  Problems with detection due to  Degradation of DNA  High degree of processing  Low amount of ingredient  Highly Processed food  May contain GMOs (oil, starch, glucose syrup)  Detection not possible, no DNA left after processing  Mixed processed food  May contain GMOs in flour, or any other ingredient (e.g. cheese)  Detection possible but in most cases very complicated, time consuming and expensive
  • 19. How, what, who and where to detect ?
  • 20. Food processing, storage • Highly polished rice- diabetes • Calcium carbide used in ripening • Wax coated apples • Transfats in edible oils
  • 21. Food Adulteration • Synthetic milk • Metalic colors on greens • Growth hormones to fruits and animals • Animal oils • Turmeric, chillipowder, tea adulteration
  • 22. Changing Food Habits • Loosing diversity in food • Millets, minor fruits, vegetables disappearing • Unseasonal vegetable • Pizzas, softdrinks, icecreams • Unnatural combinations: cooldrinks/ice creams after fatty food
  • 23. Junk food • Junk food is bad for health • It lacks nutrition and is loaded with empty calories (refined carbohydrates) • High on Salt, Sugar and Fats, including Trans fat • Unhealthy diet is one key cause of the growing global burden of disease-WHO • Changing diet -- low on nutrients and high on salt, sugar and fat, are directly indicted to disease. • Junk food is responsible for rising cases of obesity and non communicable diseases (NCDs) like cardiovascular diseases and diabetes
  • 24. Salt in your food • The amount of dietary salt consumed is an important determinant of blood pressure levels and overall cardiovascular risk. • WHO recommends salt intake of less than 5 grams per person per day; NIN recommends 6 gm • India has a serious salt problem; more than 40% population consume above 10 gm/day
  • 25. Nutritional guidelines • Fats: 15-30% of total calories • Trans fats: Max. 1% of total calories • Carbohydrates: 55-75% of total calories • Proteins: 10- 15% of total calories • Sugar: 20-25 gm/day added sugar • Salt: 5-6 gm/day Person Kilo Carbohydrate Salt Total fats Transfats calories (gm/day) (gm/day) (gm/day) (gm/day) allowed/ day Adult male 2,320 290-348 6.0 39-78 2.6 Adult female 1,900 263-315 6.0 35-70 2.1 Children (10-12 yr) 2,100 238-285 6.0 32-64 2.3
  • 26. Potato chips • Total fats: 33 gm • Carbs: 57.5 gm • Trans fats: • 0.6 gm (Bingo Oye Pudina) • 3.7 gm (Lay’s American style cream & onion, March, 2012 batch) • Salt: • 1.2 gm (Lay’s American style cream & onion • 3.5 gm (Uncle chips Spicy Treat) What these numbers mean? Values per 100 gm • Munching a standard-sized packet (65-75gm); finish about half of the daily fats quota. • Munching a packet of Lays March, 2012 batch will exceed Trans fat quota • And a packet of Uncle Chips Spicy Treat 60-70% salt quota Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 27. Indian Snacks Total fats: 36 gm Carbs: 50 gm Trans fats: • 0.7 gm (Kurkure masala munch) • 2.5 gm (Haldiram’s Aloo Bhujia) Salt: • 1.6 gm (Kurkure masala) • 3.3 gm (Haldiram’s Aloo Bhujia) What these numbers mean? * Values per 100 gm • Highly fatty food; Don’t eat too much Aloo Bhujia – will get heavy dose of salt and Trans fat • Eating a packet of Kurkure will exhaust one-third of your calorie quota and two- third of your total fat quota Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 28. Carbonated drinks Carbs: • 14 gm (Pepsi Cola) • 14.8 gm (Coca-Cola) They say all of it is Sugar What these numbers mean? * Values per 100 gm • A 300 ml bottle will have over 40 gm sugar; consumption of a single bottle will exhaust your added sugar quota almost twice over Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 29. Instant noodles Total fats: • 14 gm Carbs: • 72 gm Trans fats: • 0.6 gm (Masala Maggi) • 0.7 gm (Top Ramen, Super Noodles) Salt: • 4.2 gm (Masala Maggi) • 3.2 gm (Top Ramen, Super Noodles) What these numbers mean? * Values per 100 gm • Highly salty food with lots of empty calories; 70% of calories is just from refined carbohydrates • Eating a packet will exhaust more than half of your daily salt quota Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012 Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 30. Burgers • Total fats: 10.5 gm in veg --- 13.5 gm in non-veg • Carbs: 33 gm in non-veg --- 43 gm in veg • Trans fats: 0.4 gm • Salt: 1.2 gm in non-veg – 1.8 gm in veg What these numbers mean? • Highly salty food with lots of empty calories; non- veg high on fat (40-45%); veg high on refined carbs (55%) Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 31. Fries • Total fats: 20 gm • Carbs: 56 gm • Trans fats: 1.6 gm • Salt: 0.4 gm; Add to taste What these numbers mean? • Rich in Trans fat; a medium fries (about 150 gm) will exceed your safe limit for Trans fat Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 32. Pizzas • Total fats: 7 gm • Carbs: 50 gm • Trans fats: 0.1 gm • Salt: 1 gm * Values per 100 gm What these numbers mean? • Low on fat, salt and Trans fat; high on refined carbs --- only the basic version Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 33. Chicken fries • Total fats: 23.4 gm • Carbs: 14 gm • Trans fats: 0.7 gm • Salt: 0.9 gm What these numbers mean? • A two piece KFC chicken (about 250 gm) will exceed your Trans fat and total fat Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 34. Carbs sugar fats r Transfats T salts % of daily need • This meal will stuff you with fats and trans fats, and take care of 60-70% of your calorie requirement for the day Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 35. Carbs sugar fats Transfats salts % of daily need Study done by CSE, New Delhi March 30, 2012
  • 36. Food Laws Food laws in our country The Indian Parliament has recently passed the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 that overrides all other food related laws. Such as; Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 Fruit Products Order,1955 Meat Food Products Order ,1973; Vegetable Oil Products (Control) Order, 1947 Edible Oils Packaging (Regulation) Order 1988 Solvent Extracted Oil, De- Oiled Meal and Edible Flour (Control) Order, 1967, Milk and Milk Products Order, 1992 etc are repealed after commencement of FSS Act, 2006.
  • 37. 2004 2006 Commnity Managed Sustainable Agricutlure in Andhra Pradesh 2004-05 started with 225 acres in one dist and reached 7 lakh acres in 2007-08 in 18 dist. today the prog covers 20 lakh acres in 18 dist World Bank says this is a good tool for poverty eradication With 50 % development expenditure one can double the incomes of the farmers 2009
  • 38. Farmers and area covered under CMSA RKVY funds MKSP funds pilot * Planned intervertion CSA handholding support NGOs technical support at field level SHG groups ind. handling …aiming to reach 100 lakh acres across crops in all districts of AP in by 2014
  • 39. Who benefits from your purchase • Farmer gets Rs 15 for each kg of rice you purchase at Rs 35 • Farmer gets Rs 30 for each Kg of Toor Dal you purchase at Rs 80 • In case of other foods the farmer’s share is similar or lesser. • In processed foods farmers share is less than 10% and the rest goes to the Industry, advertising and sales. • Your purchases in retail chains go towards energy-hogging facilities like air-conditioned stores, cold storages and transportation all of which have a huge ecological cost.
  • 40. YOUR CHOICES CAN IMPROVE YOUR HEALTH, THE ENVIRONMENT AND LIVELIHOODS
  • 41. How your choice of food impacts livelihoods? • What you buy is what is grown • Where and from whom you buy determines the farmers’ share in your rupee • Today farmers income is less than Rs. 20/- a day • Perpetual losses and indebtedness is driving farmers suicide • 16 of the 32 crisis ridden districts are in AP