Chief Secretary Atal Dulloo and national experts (NITI Aayog/FSSAI) have launched a strategic push to strengthen food safety in J&K. This initiative aims to improve public health through better regulation and coordination, though its ultimate impact depends on transitioning from planning to sustained execution.
The high-level consultative meeting chaired by Chief Secretary Atal Dulloo with NITI Aayog Member Dr. V.K. Paul and senior experts from the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) signals a welcome and timely push to strengthen food safety governance in Jammu and Kashmir. In a region where public health outcomes are closely linked to regulatory capacity, consumer awareness and institutional coordination, the proposed roadmap could mark a turning point—provided intent translates into sustained action. Food safety is often treated as a technical or peripheral issue, yet it sits at the heart of public health, consumer trust and economic credibility. From street vendors and local eateries to packaged food manufacturers and hospitality services, the quality and safety of food directly affect livelihoods as well as lives. Jammu and Kashmir’s unique geography, tourism-driven economy and dispersed markets make the challenge more complex, underscoring the importance of a context-specific and future-ready strategy. The six-point framework outlined by Dr. V.K. Paul and FSSAI experts places strong emphasis on awareness, enforcement and capacity building—three pillars that have long remained uneven in the Union Territory. The proposed Information, Education and Communication (IEC) campaign is particularly significant. Laws and standards mean little if consumers are unaware of their rights or if food business operators do not understand their obligations under the Food Safety and Standards Act. A vigorous and sustained awareness drive can empower citizens to demand safer food while nudging businesses towards compliance rather than evasion. Equally important is the focus on plugging enforcement gaps. Jammu and Kashmir has regulatory structures in place, including Food Safety Appellate Tribunals and accredited laboratories in Jammu and Srinagar, but enforcement outcomes have often lagged behind statutory intent. Strengthening notifications, regulatory backing and institutional authority for the Food Safety Organization is essential if inspections, penalties and corrective measures are to act as real deterrents rather than symbolic exercises. The emphasis on human resource development and laboratory infrastructure addresses another critical bottleneck. Food safety enforcement is only as strong as the people and tools behind it.
“To align with national benchmarks by April 2026, Jammu and Kashmir is establishing a joint FSSAI–J&K expert panel supported by NITI Aayog. This initiative moves beyond simple compliance, aiming to bolster public health and institutional credibility. However, success hinges on strict adherence to timelines and seamless coordination between health, municipal, and enforcement agencies to prevent bureaucratic delays.”
Upgrading existing laboratories in the first phase is a pragmatic approach, allowing the system to build credibility and efficiency before expanding further. However, infrastructure without trained personnel risks becoming underutilised. Continuous training, skill upgradation and exposure to national best practices must therefore move in parallel. Chief Secretary Atal Dulloo’s call for a multi-year blueprint reflects a recognition that food safety reform cannot be achieved through ad-hoc measures. A structured roadmap, supported by NITI Aayog’s policy expertise, can help align Jammu and Kashmir’s food safety ecosystem with national benchmarks while accounting for local realities. The decision to constitute a joint FSSAI–J&K expert panel and roll out implementation from April 2026 provides a clear timeline, but it also raises expectations that delays and diffusion of responsibility will not be allowed to creep in. Ultimately, the success of this initiative will depend on coordination across departments—health, municipal bodies, food supplies and enforcement agencies and on political and administrative will to sustain momentum beyond consultations. Food safety governance is not merely about compliance; it is about safeguarding public health, strengthening consumer confidence and reinforcing the credibility of institutions. If executed with seriousness and continuity, this initiative can help Jammu and Kashmir move from reactive enforcement to preventive regulation ensuring that what reaches the citizen’s plate is safe, reliable and worthy of trust.


