In a review meeting held yesterday, the regulator found that more than 30-40 per cent of food businesses listed on the online platforms do not possess a valid licence despite the companies being told to comply with the norms by July-end, it said.
In many cases, listed food businesses have recently applied for the FSSAI license/registration but still do not possess them.
To ensure compliance of the food safety norms, the regulator has given “two-weeks time to these food aggregators” to delist unlicensed/unregistered food businesses and submit a detailed report, FSSAI CEO Pawan Agarwal told .
“This is part of a special drive by the regulator to bring in all food businesses under the FSSAI licensing regime and ensure compliance of the food safety laws,” he said.
The FSSAI had recently notified regulations bringing e-commerce aggregator platforms within the purview of the food safety law.
He hoped that these platforms will now begin to take food safety seriously from a regulatory standpoint.
Agarwal also appealed to the aggregators to begin to use some of their resources in training and capacity building of restaurants for improving food safety and hygiene rather than focusing only on deep discounts and aggressive marketing.
Last month, the FSSAI had directed leading e-commerce food service providers like Swiggy, Zomato, Foodpanda and UberEats to delist non-FSSAI licensed food business from their platforms by July 31 after receiving consumer complaints.
The aggregators were advised to display FSSAI license number on their platform along with name and location of the restaurants. LUX ABM ABM