With
the demand shooting up, manufacturers, and dealers of packaged drinking water
are unable supply the required quantity. There are complaints that some of them
are supplying unprotected drinking water to customers.
There
are 30 licensed packaged drinking water plants in the district. They process
around four lakh litres of drinking water for distribution.
The
inadequate drinking water supply by local bodies, and increase in demand
because of summer, have forced manufacturers to run plants for additional
hours. Even then they are unable to meet the demand of around eight lakh litres
a day.
This
gives the scope for scrupulous elements to resort to unethical practice by
supplying unprotected drinking water to customers.
Many
a time, the water carrying cans are found to be unclean, and the water
unprocessed despite being charged between Rs. 25 and Rs. 30 for a 20-litre can.
“It
is just plain water, and not purified,” said Murugan, a resident at Mittapudur.
Doctors
warn of contracting diarrhoea, fever, and jaundice if untreated water is
consumed without boiling.
The
Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and Labelling) Regulations, 2011 mandates
that the drinking water be packed in clean, hygienic, colourless, and
transparent containers made of polythene that conform to the standards. The
package should contain the date of packing, maximum retail price, and details
of the manufacturer.
T.
Anuradha, District Designated Food Officer, Tamil Nadu Food Safety and Drug
Administration Department told The Hindu that complaints regarding poor
quality of canned water were being received from the consumers. Samples of
water would be tested. If found to be unsafe for consumption, action would be
taken, she added.
Many
packaged water suppliers say they are unable to meet the high demand
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