Thursday Dec 26, 2024
Tuesday, 23 August 2016 00:05 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
The Consumer Affairs Authority (CAA) under the direction of Minister of Industry and Commerce Rishad Bathiudeen will be enforcing plastic mineral water bottling standards starting 1 September.
“Low quality PET bottles affect the quality of water in bottles,” said Bathiudeen during a consumer review conducted with his officials.
“The CAA has detected that a number of brands are using low quality Polymer/Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) bottles,” said Bathiudeen. “They affect the quality of drinking water in them. In 2014 and 2015, CAA detected a total of 26 brands with questionable bottle quality.
Bathiudeen gave the CAA the go-ahead to enforce the gazetted standards at the earliest possible instance.
The SLSI requirement was gazetted in 2015 Gazette Extraordinary 1918/18 dated 11 June 2015 but has not been strictly enforced up to now.
The Gazette stipulated that acting under the powers vested in it by Section 12 (2) of the Consumer Affairs Authority Act No. 09 of 2003, the CAA has by an , directed all producers, distributors and traders of bottled drinking water that they shall not produce, distribute, transport, store, or sell or display for sale, expose for sale or offer for sale, wholesale or retail any packaged drinking water in containers made of polymer materials unless such containers/bottles bear the SLS product certification mark issued by the Sri Lanka Standards Institution, based on the SLS 1336:2008 Sri Lanka Standard Specification for Containers made of Polymer Materials for Packaging of Drinking Water.
This Direction shall come into effect from 1 September.
CAA does not pursue the quality of water in pet bottles since their water quality is certified by the Health Ministry.