UAE | General
Abu Dhabi Food and Control Authority announces new regulations to protect food from heat
Businesses given three-month grace period to ensure items are carried in temperature-controlled vehicles.
- Temperature-controlled trucks will become mandatory to transport food, water and soft drinks.
- Image Credit: Ravindranath/Gulf News
Abu Dhabi: The Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority (ADFCA) is tightening regulations regarding the delivery of food to ensure it does not go off in the heat.
The regulations, introduced yesterday, state food items must be transported at temperatures between 1 and 5C. Frozen items must be stored below minus 18C. Dry foods and liquids must be stored at temperatures between 25C and 30C.
Major retailers
Major food establishments such as Carrefour, Spinneys and Lulu Hypermarket already have their own rigorous standards for transporting food. However, the new regulations are likely to have a greater impact on smaller businesses.
Water delivery companies are notorious for delivering water in open and uncontrolled temperature trucks. For Radwan, a water delivery company in Abu Dhabi, the implications of this new regulation are huge.
"Of course this will affect us financially. All our trucks right now are closed, but we don't have climate-controlled trucks. It's dependent on the outside temperature," Khalid Ali a spokesperson for the Radwan Water Company told Gulf News. While Ali rejected the concept that heat is bad for water, he said: "We will have to follow the rules, but the impact will be significant. We will have to install cooling systems in each of our 22 trucks. This will increase our diesel consumption."
The implications of the new regulation are too early to predict but some retailers say this will inevitably affect prices and consumers will be hit.
"We will have to raise the price of our water to balance this and divide the cost," Ali said.
The ADFCA has given a grace period of three months for businesses to make the proper adjustments for delivery. The regulations will come into effect on November 17.
An ADFCA spokesperson says this new regulation will help bring Abu Dhabi on a par with standards in developed countries.
Awareness campaign
"The problem is that we have these [food] items coming from countries where temperatures are not as hot as here. We are going to be developing an awareness campaign among businesses to promote this idea.
"At this point we are not going to be going out and checking every single delivery truck, but when businesses are renewing their annual licence we will be inspecting. Those who are found to be violating the regulation will have their licence revoked," the spokesperson said.
Health focus: Keeping it cool
- 18C for frozen items
- 1 to 5C for items such as fruit and vegetables
- 25 to 30C for dry foods and liquids such as water and juices.
July Report for the ADFCA:
- Total number of inspections: 1,662
- Warnings issued: 541
- Fines: 54
- Closure of stores: 15
- Complaints: 34
- Source: Abu Dhabi Food and Control Authority
Share this article
Popular in UAE

-
Your pictures
Readers' pictures
The best reader pictures from around the UAE this week
Latest news
- Ministry opens hotline to report violators
- First well in relief project to honour scientist
- Help me find my precious cat
- AG expresses confidence in public prosecution's skills
- National ID needed for Interior Ministry services
- Meet to discuss ways to secure energy supplies
- Deyaar case: Expert asked to submit detailed report i
- Institute adopts best judicial practices
- Dubai hospital wins Spain architecture festival award
- Masters in construction law to address sector's concerns
- Private schools form lobby group
- New council to strike demographic balance
- Green moves make desalting plant less damaging
- Technology can negatively affect girls: forum
- Dubai-based British athlete attempts to swim around Palm in record bid
Community Reports
-
Help me find my precious cat
Raif, my cute eight-month-old ‘fur ball', went missing in Abu Dhabi's Al Bateen area last month
-
Pavement parking irks pedestrians
Gulf News reader calls on authorities to step in and stop car owners from invading pathways meant for safe walking
-
Faded parking lines pose a problem
Motorists could be fined for parking incorrectly even though they can hardly see the boundaries in the designated areas
-
School buses block residential parking
Commercial vehicles taking up free parking facilities in Al Wuheida, inconveniencing residents in surrounding villas


