

FDA said samples it received from Ghanaians showed that they were actually authentic and not plastic after laboratory investigations.
The Food and Drugs Authority has denied claims that plastic rice is being imported into the market.
This comes on the back of reports, particularly, on social media of packaged rice suspected to have been produced from plastic materials and being sold on the Ghanaian market.
But the FDA said samples it received from Ghanaians showed that they were actually authentic and not plastic after laboratory investigations.
It said its international partner, the International Food Safety Authority Network (INFOSAN) who had also investigated the same issue said: “Rumoured artificial, plastic, fake rice appearing in Singapore, Nigeria and Canada turned out to be real, authentic rice.”
Explaining how to identify real rice from plastic rice, the head of Food Safety Management at the FDA, Maria Lovelace-Johnson, “there was no way plastic will not melt at boiling temperature” during cooking, adding that “plastic cannot be moulded at room temperature”, refuting claims that there is plastic rice on the Ghanaian market.
The FDA added that real rice will cook at a temperature of 100 degrees Celsius whilst the alleged plastic rice will remain as solid granules when cooked at 100 degrees Celsius since plastics require a much higher temperature to melt.
The FDA further used the opportunity to call on Ghanaians to be alert and report any food items that feel suspicious about.
FDA said samples it received from Ghanaians showed that they were actually authentic and not plastic after laboratory investigations. Read Full Story
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