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Rediff.com  » Business » Centre set to seek Rs 426 cr in damages from Nestlé

Centre set to seek Rs 426 cr in damages from Nestlé

By Sanjeeb Mukherjee
August 11, 2015 08:48 IST
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MaggiTo move NCDRC on behalf of consumers over alleged unfair trade practices by the firm

The Centre looks set to seek a compensation of around Rs 426 crore (Rs 4.26 billion) from Swiss food major Nestlé over the alleged damages caused by Maggi noodles to Indian consumers.

At a time when Nestlé India is awaiting a verdict from the Bombay High Court in its case against the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India, it might now have to fight another legal battle.

The consumer affairs ministry is ready to file a complaint with the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission in the next few days.

The complaint, to be filed on behalf of Indian consumers, is against 'unfair trade practices' and 'misleading consumers' in the Maggi case.

A senior ministry official confirmed to Business Standard: “The file has been formally cleared.”

The development comes within days of Consumer Affairs Minister Ram Vilas Paswan telling the media that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had asked his Cabinet colleagues to 'maintain decorum' on the Maggi issue.

Also, some ministers in the government have been critical of FSSAI’s Maggi recall order.

While some have cited international investors’ nervousness in the matter -- without wanting to be named -- Food Processing Minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal has been more open.

She had earlier said the Maggi incident had led to an environment of fear.

FSSAI Chief Executive Yudhvir Singh Malik had, however, told this newspaper last week that he was more concerned that children should not be consuming contaminated products than anything else.

Industry, according to him, should be more proactive and sensitive in these matters.

Nestlé India estimates indicate that the company destroyed products worth Rs 360 crore (Rs 3.6 billion) after FSSAI’s recall order, based on testing of Maggi samples by Food and Drugs Administrations of around half a dozen states.

The regulator, on June 5, also stopped the company from manufacturing the noodles in India. Subsequently, Nestlé India moved court against the FSSAI order; a verdict is pending.

Though the consumer affairs ministry had started the process of filing a complaint with NCDRC two months ago -- around the time FSSAI ordered a countrywide recall of Maggi noodles from retail shelves -- it had to go through layers of legal opinion to make it a water-tight case, an official pointed out.

The compensation that the government is seeking from Nestlé India has been calculated on the basis of Maggi sales’ share in Nestlé India’s total revenue in the country in 2014-15.

The company’s Maggi noodles revenue was pegged at around Rs 2,500 crore (Rs 25 billion) -- this was 25 per cent of the company’s total India revenue.

“In the interest of millions of consumers, the department of consumer affairs took suo motu action against the company,” the official explained.

When contacted, a Nestlé India spokesperson said the company had not received any intimation on this from the government.

Usually, NCDRC comes into the picture when a consumer files a complaint.

But a section of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986, also empowers the Centre and state governments to register complaints on behalf of consumers.

The consumer affairs ministry is expected to file the complaint under this provision of law.

The recall of Maggi noodles followed sample tests which showed presence of monosodium glutamate and an excessive level of lead in the sample tested.

In its order of June 5, FSSAI had said the product was 'hazardous' for human consumption.

According to Nestlé India, its own tests showed compliance with the norms, though the company announced withdrawal of Maggi noodles from the Indian market minutes before the FSSAI order on June 5.

(Additional reporting by Arnab Dutta in New Delhi)

MAGGI MESS

  • Rs 360 cr

      The hit Nestlé India took as it disposed of packets of Maggi noodles after recall from the market

  • Rs 2,500 cr

      Nestlé India’s FY15 revenue from Maggi noodles (25% of total)

  • Rs 64.4 cr

      Nestlé India’s net loss in the April-June quarter, mainly on account of the ban on Maggi noodles

  • Rs 426 cr

      The amount the consumer affairs ministry might be seeking in damages from Nestlé India for misleading consumers

Image: Packets of Nestle's Maggi instant noodles are seen on display at a grocery in Mumbai, June 3, 2015. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

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Sanjeeb Mukherjee in New Delhi
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