What’s the point of invisible or unreadable details on packaged food items, asks government?
Advertisement
Advertisement
Government is considering changing the
The Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules 2011 states the font size that need to be printed on the packets of consumable items, but most companies do not follow strictly, leading to font size being unreadable. This is why the US standard on font size is under consideration, said a senior official from the
The font size for a food packet ranging from 200 grams/ml up to 500 grams/ml would be doubled, from 2 mm to 4 mm, while packets above that would have a font size of 8 mm.
Coming to the barcode, this would help the government in distinguishing products made in India from those made in other countries, so that sale of fake food items can be stopped.
Advertisement
Advertisement
- CEO says he tried to hire an AI researcher from Meta, and was told to 'come back to me when you have 10,000 H100 GPUs'
- We bought a house in Japan for $30,000. We'll have more land than we could afford in the US, and our kids will be more independent.
- Rumors Prince William is having an affair with Rose Hanbury are flooding social media again after Stephen Colbert waded into 'Katespiracy'
- Sensex, Nifty tank in early trade amid weak Asian markets, foreign fund outflows
- Long-Term vs. Short-Term Debt
- Mutual funds stress test: What it means for you
- Businesses should not be built on model, but out of passion: Peyush Bansal
- Delhi world's most polluted capital, Begusarai top polluted metro says IQAir