Published 25 Oct 2025
FSSAI Bans Non-Compliant ORS Drinks ā Court Stay on ā¹180 Crore Stock Raises Eyebrows
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has banned misleading āORSā drinks that donāt meet medical standards, while a company with ā¹180 crore worth of stock has secured a temporary court stay ā raising questions of fairness and public health.

Key Takeaways
- FSSAI bans non-compliant āORSā drinks for misleading consumers.
- Some beverages contained excessive sugar and failed WHO-approved formulations.
- Delhi High Court allows one company to sell existing ā¹180 crore stock.
- Doctors call it a partial victory ā warning that consumer safety must come first.
Why Did FSSAI Ban These Drinks?
The FSSAI took action after discovering that several beverages were using theĀ term āORSāĀ ā short for Oral Rehydration Salts ā without actually meeting the medical formula set by theĀ World Health Organization (WHO).
Many of these drinks hadĀ high sugar contentĀ andĀ imbalanced electrolytes, making them unsafe for treating dehydration or diarrhoea, especially in children.
Doctors had been raising this issue for years, claiming that these so-called āhydration drinksā wereĀ misleading familiesĀ into thinking they were safe substitutes for real ORS.
After an 8-year campaign by paediatricians likeĀ Dr. Sivaranjani SantoshĀ from Hyderabad, FSSAI finally banned the misleading labels, saying that only WHO-compliant formulations can use the wordĀ āORS.ā
The ORSL Controversy and the Courtās Role
One major company,Ā JNTL Consumer Health (India)Ā ā the maker of theĀ āORSLā drinkĀ ā was directly affected by this order.
The company approached theĀ Delhi High Court, arguing that it had followed older permissions from FSSAI which allowed it to use āORSā in the brand name with a disclaimer.
The court granted a *temporary stay, allowing the company to *sell off ā¹180 crore worth of existing stock, which is currently sitting in warehouses and stores across India.
While this provides short-term relief for the company, many health experts say it couldĀ confuse consumersĀ who still see the misleading āORSā branding on bottles.
Is It Fair to Sell the ā¹180 Crore Stock?
This question has divided opinion.
From a business point of view:
- The company says it invested heavily based on earlier permissions.
- A sudden ban would cause heavy financial losses and job impact.
From a public health point of view:
- Experts argue that selling these drinks, even temporarily,Ā risks public confusion.
- Parents may still buy these thinking theyāre genuine medical ORS.
- Doctors say this weakens the very purpose of the ban āĀ protecting peopleās health.
So, while legally the courtās stay seems fair to the manufacturer, ethically, itās being calledĀ āa setback for consumer safety.ā
šĀ Real Facts and Figures
Detail | Information |
|---|---|
š¹Ā FSSAI Ban Date | October 14, 2025 |
š¹Ā Court Stay | Granted by Delhi High Court (interim order) |
š¹Ā Company Involved | JNTL Consumer Health (India) Pvt. Ltd. |
š¹Ā Stock Value | ā¹180 crore |
š¹Ā Market Size (ORS-tagged drinks) | ā¹1,200 crore (estimated) |
š¹Ā Core Issue | Misuse of āORSā label by high-sugar beverages |
š¹Ā Standard Reference | WHO-approved ORS formula |
The Good and the Bad
ā Whatās Good
- Consumer protection strengthenedĀ ā only real ORS will remain in the market.
- TransparencyĀ ā buyers can trust that āORSā means the medically correct solution.
- Health awarenessĀ ā the issue has started a nationwide conversation about misleading drinks.
ā Whatās Bad
- Financial hitĀ for beverage companies.
- Market confusionĀ ā during transition, old and new labels may mix.
- Partial enforcementĀ ā the stay order delays full consumer protection.
Expert Reactions
Health professionals have largely welcomed FSSAIās action.
Dr. Santosh, whose 8-year battle triggered the ban, said:
āThis is a win for consumers and children. Drinks high in sugar are not medicine. They must not hide behind the name āORSā.ā
However, legal experts note that FSSAI may need to issueĀ clear transition guidelinesĀ for companies, so that genuine businesses can adjust without chaos.
Conclusion
The FSSAIās decision is a strong step towardĀ cleaner, safer labelling in Indiaās health-drink market.
But theĀ court stayĀ on existing stock shows how difficult it is to balanceĀ public health and business rights.
For now, consumers should stay alert:
Only buyĀ WHO-approved ORS sachets or bottlesĀ from trusted pharmacies ā not from supermarket shelves claiming āORS-likeā benefits.
Until the legal dust settles, Indiaās hydration shelves will continue to stir debate ā betweenĀ profits, packaging, and public health.

Dr Sudheer Pandey
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