If there is one food safety issue that defines the Indian groundnut export trade more than any other, it is aflatoxin. Aflatoxin contamination has been the leading cause of Indian peanut rejections at EU ports for years and the EU's rapid alert system (RASFF) regularly publishes notifications of non-compliant Indian groundnut shipments. For importers, understanding aflatoxin what it is?, where it comes from?, how to test for it?, and what limits apply? is not optional. It is fundamental due diligence.
What is Aflatoxin?
Aflatoxins are naturally occurring mycotoxins produced by moulds. primarily Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus. that grow on groundnuts (and other crops including maize, tree nuts, and spices) under warm, humid conditions. They are colourless, tasteless, and odourless. you cannot detect them by sight or smell. They can only be identified through laboratory testing.
There are several types of aflatoxin, but the most important for regulatory purposes are:
- Aflatoxin B1 - the most toxic and most strictly regulated; classified as a Group 1 carcinogen (known human carcinogen) by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
- Aflatoxin B2, G1, G2 - also toxic but generally found at lower concentrations
- Total aflatoxins - the sum of B1 + B2 + G1 + G2; most regulations set limits for both B1 alone and total aflatoxins
Why Indian Groundnuts Are Particularly at Risk
Aflatoxin contamination in Indian groundnuts is driven primarily by growing and storage conditions. Groundnuts grown in hot, semi-arid conditions. such as Gujarat's Saurashura region are particularly susceptible when the crop experiences drought stress during pod filling, which creates conditions favourable for Aspergillus growth. Poor post-harvest handling, inadequate drying and improper storage in high-humidity conditions further increase contamination risk.
This does not mean all Indian groundnuts are contaminated, far from it. Well-managed supply chains with proper field practices, rapid post-harvest drying and cold storage can consistently produce aflatoxin-compliant groundnuts. But it does mean that aflatoxin testing is non-negotiable for every shipment.
Never accept an Indian groundnut shipment without an aflatoxin test report from an ISO 17025 accredited laboratory issued on the specific lot you are purchasing. A test report from a previous shipment or a different lot is not valid for your consignment.
Aflatoxin Limits by Market
| Market / Region | Aflatoxin B1 Limit | Total Aflatoxins Limit |
|---|---|---|
| European Union | 4 μg/kg (ppb) | 10 μg/kg (ppb) |
| United Kingdom | 4 μg/kg (ppb) | 10 μg/kg (ppb) |
| USA (FDA) | No specific B1 limit | 20 μg/kg total |
| Codex Alimentarius | No specific B1 limit | 15 μg/kg total |
| India (domestic/FSSAI) | 10 μg/kg | 30 μg/kg total |
| China | 20 μg/kg B1 | No total limit |
| GCC / Middle East | 2–5 μg/kg (varies) | 10–15 μg/kg |
The EU limit of 4 μg/kg for aflatoxin B1 is the strictest in the world for peanuts intended for direct human consumption. This is why EU-bound groundnut shipments require the most rigorous testing and why EU buyers pay a premium for certified compliant lots.
How Aflatoxin Testing Works
Aflatoxin is not uniformly distributed within a lot; a single contaminated pod can dramatically raise the average level. This means sampling methodology is critical:
- Representative sampling - the laboratory must collect samples from multiple points across the lot (bags selected from different positions in the container or warehouse)
- Grinding - the sample must be finely ground to ensure uniform distribution before testing
- HPLC or ELISA method - High Performance Liquid Chromatography is the gold standard analytical method; ELISA is used for rapid screening
- ISO 17025 accreditation - the testing laboratory must hold this accreditation for results to be accepted by EU and US authorities
Testing typically takes 3-5 working days. The cost is usually $50-150 per sample depending on the test scope.
What Happens if a Shipment Fails the Aflatoxin Test?
If a shipment is found to exceed the aflatoxin limits of your importing country, the consequences are serious:
- EU RASFF notification - the EU rapid alert system publishes the rejection, damaging the supplier's reputation and potentially triggering enhanced controls on future shipments from the same supplier
- Port rejection - the shipment is refused entry and must be re-exported or destroyed at the importer's expense
- Financial loss - you bear the cost of storage, testing, re-export or destruction, and lose the value of the cargo
- Enhanced border controls - the EU can place enhanced controls on specific origins or suppliers, meaning a higher percentage of subsequent shipments are tested at entry
How to Protect Yourself as an Importer
- Make aflatoxin compliance a contractual requirement - include a specific maximum limit in your purchase order
- Require a pre-shipment aflatoxin test report from an ISO 17025 accredited laboratory issued on your specific lot
- Consider independent pre-shipment inspection for large orders - appoint a third-party inspector (SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek) to sample and test before loading
- Include a rejection and return clause in your contract - if the pre-shipment test fails, the supplier must replace the lot at their cost
- For EU-bound shipments, use a laboratory that is specifically recognised by EU authorities
Aflatoxin-Compliant Groundnuts from Draba Ventures
Every groundnut shipment from Draba Ventures is tested for aflatoxin by an ISO 17025 accredited laboratory before loading. We provide full test reports with every shipment. Request a quote and sample today.
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