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Godrej to Invest ₹150 Crore to Expand Dairy Plant in TelanganaNDDB, Banas Dairy & Suzuki Partner on Big Biogas Push in GujaratDairy giants rush to recall infant formula after contamination scareInside the World’s Giant 230,000 Cow Mega Farm in ChinaIndia’s First Camel Milk Plant Boosts Niche Dairy Growth

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Paneer Under Scanner as FSSAI Acts Tough

By DairyNews7x7•Published on December 26, 2025

Is the loose, unpack­aged pan­eer sold at local shops a genu­ine dairy product, or does it con­tain non-dairy sub­sti­tutes? India’s apex food safety reg­u­lator has stepped in to ensure con­sumers are not short­changed.

The Food Safety and Stand­ards Author­ity of India (FSSAI) plans to intro­duce stricter norms to help dis­tin­guish between pan­eer made purely from milk, and nondairy sub­sti­tutes that are increas­ingly enter­ing the ₹65,000-crore domestic pan­eer mar­ket, accord­ing to two gov­ern­ment offi­cials and a doc­u­ment reviewed by Mint.

Author­it­ies have fre­quently seized fake pan­eer ahead of major fest­ivals, when demand surges and unscru­pu­lous traders flood mar­kets with adul­ter­ated products, pos­ing a threat to con­sumer health.

To curb this unsa­voury prac­tice, FSSAI pro­poses to make it com­puls­ory for pan­eer sub­sti­tutes (products made from non-dairy ingredi­ents such as veget­able oils) to be labelled as “pan­eer ana­logue”, while pro­hib­it­ing the use of any dairy-related ter­min­o­logy.

“Cur­rently, ana­logues are designed to mimic the white, creamy appear­ance of tra­di­tional or real pan­eer, often using starches and emul­si­fi­ers to rep­lic­ate the tex­ture. The pro­posed reg­u­la­tions aim to empower con­sumers to make informed choices and pro­mote healthy eat­ing,” said the first of the two offi­cials cited earlier, both of whom spoke on the con­di­tion of anonym­ity.

For clear iden­ti­fic­a­tion, the sub­sti­tutes will have food col­our added to them to ensure that they stand out from the white and nat­ural dairy pan­eer or pan­eer-based products. In addi­tion, such "pan­eer ana­logues” can be sold only in sealed pack­ages, with a clear instruc­tion that their nutri­tional prop­er­ties must be on par with dairy-based pan­eer.

Unlike real, nat­ural pan­eer that's made by curd­ling milk, ana­logues util­ize veget­able oil, skimmed milk powder, and emul­si­fi­ers that lack the nutri­tional pro­file of milk fat. While dairy-based pan­eer is a power­house of pro­tein and healthy fats, ana­logues have high unhealthy trans fats.

The devel­op­ment assumes sig­ni­fic­ance given that pan­eer or pan­eer-based products play an import­ant role in meet­ing diet­ary needs of a large part of India's veget­arian pop­u­la­tion.

Organ­ised brands such as Amul, Mother Dairy, Parag Milk Foods and Coun­try Delight account for just about 10% of India’s pan­eer mar­ket, with the rest cornered by the unor­gan­ised sec­tor, where non-dairy pan­eer sub­sti­tutes are often sold without dis­clos­ure. Apart from a lack of aware­ness, price remains a key driver for ana­logue pan­eer. While loose pan­eer typ­ic­ally sells at around ₹340 per kg, branded coun­ter­parts are priced at ₹460 per kg.

Accord­ing to the doc­u­ment reviewed by Mint, the pro­posal sug­gests intro­du­cing a spe­cific pro­vi­sion under the Food Safety and Stand­ards Reg­ulations, 2011 to reg­u­late the sale of dairy ana­logues mis­rep­res­en­ted as pan­eer and other dairy products, and develop stand­ards man­dat­ing a dis­tinct nomen­clature for “pan­eer ana­logue”, bar­ring the use of any dairy terms.

To ensure nutri­tional safety, the products must func­tion­ally match actual dairy, with stand­ard­ized fat and pro­tein con­tent—poten­tially requir­ing at least 80% milk con­stitu­ents—and include food col­ours like Tartrazine.

“The nutri­tional prop­er­ties (both organ­o­leptic­ally and func­tion­ally) shall be at par with the actual dairy coun­ter­parts. Min­imum per­cent­age of fat, solids-not-fat (SNF), pro­tein con­tent for dairy ana­logue products shall be stand­ard­ised. For example, at least 80% be only milk con­stitu­ents in any ana­logue products,” the doc­u­ment said.

“These recom­mend­a­tions were dis­cussed dur­ing (FSSAI’s) Cent­ral Advis­ory Com­mit­tee (CAC) meet­ing. The mat­ter is under review and under con­sulta­tion and a final decision is yet to be taken,” said the second gov­ern­ment offi­cial.

Quer­ies emailed to the spokes­per­sons of FSSAI, the health min­istry, Gujarat Cooper­at­ive Milk Mar­ket­ing Fed­er­a­tion (GCMMF) that oper­ates Amul, and Coun­try Delight on 16 Decem­ber remained unanswered till press time.

Jayatheer­tha Chary, deputy man­aging dir­ector of Mother Dairy Fruit & Veget­able said: “A clear dis­tinc­tion between authen­tic dairy products and ana­logues is essen­tial to safe­guard con­sumer trust and mis­lead­ing prac­tices, thereby enhan­cing trans­par­ency across the mar­ket. Mother Dairy is invest­ing in ini­ti­at­ives to edu­cate con­sumers on authen­ti­city and qual­ity. With grow­ing con­sumer con­scious­ness, the shift towards pack­aged pan­eer is accel­er­at­ing, provid­ing greater assur­ance of hygiene, qual­ity con­sist­ency, and trace­ab­il­ity.”

Author­it­ies have sought to crack down on fake pan­eer through search seizure opera­curb tions, but have failed to elim­in­ate the men­ace. Author­it­ies in the Delhi-NCR region seized and des­troyed 500 kg of adul­ter­ated fake pan­eer in Noida as part of a pre-Diwali crack­down on food adul­ter­a­tion this Octo­ber.

As India pre­pared for Christ­mas fest­iv­it­ies on Thursday, the Union health min­istry took to X to cau­tion con­sumers against fake pan­eer. “Pan­eer is nutri­tious when it’s real. Under­stand­ing the dif­fer­ence between Dairy Pan­eer, Ana­logue Pan­eer, and Unsafe Pan­eer empowers you to make safer food choices for your­self and your fam­ily. Adul­ter­ated or poor-qual­ity pan­eer can affect your health, so awareshould ness is essen­tial," the min­istry said in its post.

R.S. Sodhi, past pres­id­ent of the Indian Dairy Asso­ci­ation (IDA) and former man­aging dir­ector of GCMMF, said the term “pan­eer ana­logue” is con­tra­dict­ory because ”pan­eer” implies a dairy product.

“As per FSSAI, no dairy term can be used for a nondairy product. The unor­gan­ized sec­tor is largely respons­ible for selling these veget­able-oil-based ana­logues as pan­eer. With GST on pan­eer now nil, the branded pack­aged pan­eer seg­ment is grow­ing at 15-20%. Pan­eer should not be sold loose; with only pack­aged sales ensur­ing con­sumers are aware of what they are buy­ing.”

Source : DAirynews7x7 Dec 26th 2025 The Mint

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