|
PRESS RELEASE:
August 23, 2006
Junk science
of the ministry is dangerous, says CSE
CSE rebuts health minister’s statement, reiterates that colas are not safe.
The government has no proof that the drinks are safe. It has results for
only two bottles. Even these results have not been made public.
Moreover, the health minister has not contradicted our report. What he is
saying is of a piece with what the government has been doing for the past
three years: putting a public health issue on hold.
What CSE wants is immediate notification of BIS’s standards for carbonated
beverages, already finalised
New Delhi August 23, 2006: The science used by the health ministry experts
to give cola companies a clean chit is complete junk, says the Centre for
Science and Environment (CSE), in a detailed, point-by-point response to the
government’s report. The health minister told Parliament that a grand total
of ‘2’ bottles were tested by the government, which he has used to give the
cola companies a certificate of safety. The report of this test is not
public. Another 28 bottles have been allegedly tested in Gujarat, for which
no details are available. “This is dangerous, as it amounts to misleading us
about the health impacts of these drinks. These very drinks, we had found,
exceeded pesticide residue limits up to 50 times,” says CSE.
The minister had to necessarily discredit the CSE report to clear the cola
companies. What CSE would like to know is: One, what was the sampling
procedure involved in collecting the 2 bottles for testing? Two, what was
the methodology used by the laboratory for testing and how did it differ
from CSE’s? Three, did the laboratory confirm the results using a GC-MS, as
CSE did? Without public disclosures, it is clear that the health ministry’s
report is not credible. Predictably, the cola companies have seized this
occasion to claim their products are safe.
The government has tested two bottles, and they have not revealed their
methodology. CSE, on the other hand, tested 57 bottles, collected from 12
states, representing 30 per cent of the bottling plants. The bottles were
tested using a methodology which, three years ago, was examined and endorsed
by the Joint Parliamentary Committee. Moreover, the presence of pesticide
residues was additionally confirmed with GC-MS: all its spectra confirm
pesticide residues. “The intention of the health ministry to debunk CSE’s
study and so clear the cola companies is obvious and disgraceful,” says CSE.
In other words, the government has no proof that the drinks are safe.
Indeed, health minister Anbumani Ramadoss told Parliament: “I have stated in
my answer that we are not contradicting the CSE report.” He added: “It is
not that the report is right or wrong. Currently it is inconclusive and we
need more details.” This is obviously evasion and obfuscation, as our
detailed rebuttal below will also show.
Government nit-picks, needlessly
CSE’s point-by-point rebuttal makes it clear that the report of the experts
is vague, misleading and even factually incorrect. The report has been
written with just one purpose – insinuating and picking holes in the CSE
report to discredit it. More shocking, the internal committee of the health
ministry quotes verbatim from reports of Coca-Cola-sponsored laboratory for
its “critique”. “The CSE laboratory uses scientifically and statistically
valid testing methodologies and we are prepared to face, yet again, any new
investigation the government chooses to set up. Even in 2003, the attack was
against us and our laboratory. We were vindicated then. We will be
vindicated again,” says CSE.
Point-by-point rebuttal
1 What government said: Heptachlor is
banned since 1996, so its presence is unlikely.
CSE’s rebuttal: Heptachlor was banned precisely because it is a
highly persistent pesticide. Once used, it is likely to be found in the
environment for more than 20 years. Therefore, not only will heptachlor be
found today; it will, in all probability, continue to be found for the next
10 years. The very scientists in the ministry’s expert group, who are today
questioning heptachlor findings, have themselves found this pesticide in
different kinds of samples – water, vegetables, milk -- from all over the
country. A list of these reports is available on CSE’s website.
GC-MS chromatograms in CSE’s detailed report indisputably confirm the
presence of heptaclor in samples tested by us. Thus, here too, the ministry’s
committee is wrong.
2 What government said: The
prevalence of delta HCH is in contradiction to its biological nature.
CSE’s rebuttal: Government’s own labs,
and various research organisations all over the country, have also found
this “contradiction”. Residues of delta HCH have been found in numerous
samples of milk, drinking water, pond water, vegetables, soil samples and
even in rainwater all over the country. Delta HCH has been found in samples
from Bhatinda, Thiruvananthapuram, Hissar, Sirsa and Rohtak, Delhi,
Shahjahanpur, Hardwar and other parts of India. If CSE’s findings are
“contradictory” then so are those of such eminent government organizations
as the Indian Council of Medical Research, the Indian Council of
Agricultural Research and the Chandigarh-based Post Graduate Institute of
Medical Education and Research.
3 What government said: The CSE
report does not provide details required for the confirmatory interpretation
of quantum results
CSE’s rebuttal: The report put on our website and scrutinised by the ministry’s expert committee is a scientifically
standardised report, following universally accepted norms.
Our complete investigation of cola samples is compiled as a 452-page report,
comprising GC-ECD/NPD chromatograms and GC-MS spectra. The full report is
available for public scrutiny.
4 What government said: Malathion
residue is technically unlikely and the GC-MS also confirms absence of
malathion
CSE’s rebuttal: The same issue was raised and analysed in detail by
the Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) in 2003-04: CSE’s malathion findings
withstood scientific scrutiny and were endorsed by the JPC.
This time round CSE has double checked malathion findings and confirmed it
through a state-of-the-art GC-MS equipment. The GC-MS report unequivocally
detects and confirms malathion. This is the most credible, and
scientifically advanced, evidence to show the presence of malathion and,
therefore, the ministry’s expert committee is completely wrong.
5 What government said:
Chlorpyrifos is present but the retention time does not match
CSE’s
rebuttal: We thank the experts for detecting this dangerous pesticide in
colas. However, so far as ‘retention time’ is concerned, it is general
scientific understanding that the retention time of a pure compound such as
chlorpyrifos in GC-MS and that of the same compound in a food commodity will
always vary slightly, because the food commodity also contains chemicals
other than that compound.
For instance, our tests show colas contain 3-6 pesticides, plus other
additives. This is why the retention time of chlorpyrifos in GC-MS of cola
samples has varied slightly. In any case, in GC-MS analysis, retention time
is not so important. What is of greater import is the identification of the
compound by the GC-MS. In this case, chlorpyrifos was detected at first hit
in the GC-MS, confirming its presence.
6 What government said: The
literature review of the CSE report is not balanced
CSE’s rebuttal: The literature review talks about issues other than
pertaining to the test report. In our review, we have talked about
constituents of soft drinks such as caffeine, acids and other additives. All
these constituents are harmful. Thus, the ministry’s criticism itself is
unbalanced.
CSE challenge: notify BIS standards immediately
If the health ministry is to be believed, then there are no pesticides in
the final product of the two companies. It also means that the final product
of these companies can be tested. After all, it has been tested now and
given a clean chit. The companies have, over 20 BIS meetings held over the
last two-and-a-half years, opposed the standards, saying that there is no
validated test methodology and that their products are too complex to be
tested. The companies have also opposed the notification of the final
product standards, which have been finalised by the Bureau of Indian
Standards.
But if they are so clean and they meet the standard, then why are the
companies still not asking government to notify the final product standards
immediately?
|