After imposing an import ban on five agriculture commodities from India in the past six months, the European Union is gearing up to extend the ban to Indian paan (betel leaves) as well.
Frequent bans on Indian food products by the EU have prompted the Indian government to invite the officials of the EU Food and Veterinary Office to let them assess the food safety standards followed by India.
An EU delegation is expected to visit India in the first week of September, said an official with the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority.
Last month, Apeda had advised Indian exporters to immediately stop export of betel leaves to the EU, unless the products were tested in Apeda-approved laboratories.
Apeda said in its advisory: “There have been reports of the likelihood of betel leaves becoming the next product to be banned by the EU. Several rapid alerts have been reported.
“The prime reason of these rapid alerts appears to be detection of salmonella (a bacteria that causes diarrhoea and vomiting). India’s annual export of betel leaves is close to $500,000 with the UK accounting for nearly 20 per cent of the exports.
Vegetables exports to the EU have fallen 30 per cent in the first four months of the current financial year, while exports of betel leaves have been negligible, said Ankush Saha, a vegetable exporter.
Among the vegetable varieties that face import ban from the EU are: Trichosanthes (snake gourd), Solanum melongena (eggplant), Momordica (bitter gourd) Colocasia (Patra leaves), and from mangoes.
In the past, the EU had raised issues about groundnut as well.
Although these vegetables account for not more than five per cent of India’s total fruit and vegetable exports to the EU, in terms of value, the increased frequency of rejections of Indian products has been a dampener to India’s agri-trade