Headline
How Combination Of Paracetamol, Carbide For Ripening Fruits Compromises Health

Artificial ripening is commonly employed to make fruits market-ready quickly, especially in regions with poor cold-chain infrastructure.
Chemicals such as calcium carbide and, more recently, paracetamol, have been found to be used in this process.
Research shows that these chemicals release heat when activated, creating conditions that mimic natural ripening. However, this process often introduces toxic substances into fruits, posing health risks to consumers.
A study by Mouli Chandar and Anton Smith from the Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Engineering and Technology at Annamalai University, in Chidambaram, India, reviewed the artificial ripening of bananas, examining its physicochemical changes, benefits, and harmful effects.
Their research examined the effects of various ripening methods, including natural ripening, fumigation, exposure to heat, and the use of substances like calcium carbide, ethylene, and methyl jasmonate.
The study found that natural ripening yields beneficial effects without toxicity, while stress-induced or chemically induced ripening alters active components, potentially leading to physiological dysfunction in humans.
Negative risks
Using paracetamol to artificially ripen fruits such as bananas and plantains has become a significant health concern in Nigeria.
Health and nutrition experts warn that this practice is hazardous due to chemical alterations and the risks it poses to the food chain.
Paracetamol, also known as acetaminophen, contains active compounds such as para-aminophenol derivatives, which exhibit mild oxidative properties.
When exposed to heat or specific environmental conditions, these compounds break down into by-products that can accelerate the ripening process by stimulating the release of ethylene gas, a natural plant hormone responsible for ripening.
However, the misuse of paracetamol in ripening alters its chemical composition, leaving harmful residues on fruits. Fruits ripened with paracetamol may retain toxic by-products, which, over time, can lead to liver and kidney damage as the body struggles to process these excessive and unnatural chemicals.
According to a health researcher based in Europe, Temitope Fadeyi, the breakdown of paracetamol under heat can produce harmful compounds such as aniline, which is potentially carcinogenic and increases the risk of cancer with prolonged exposure.
READ ALSO: NAFDAC Issues Warning To Bakeries Over Saccharin, Bromate Usage
This process also compromises the nutritional quality of fruits, reducing their vitamin content and altering their sensory characteristics.
Additionally, frequent consumption of such fruits can cause acute symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain, as well as chronic conditions like organ damage.
A nutritionist and dietician, Mrs Ngozika Nnam, noted that this process can also lead to hormonal disruptions.
She noted that certain chemical by-products may act as endocrine disruptors, potentially affecting hormonal balance, fertility, and development in consumers, including children and pregnant women.
Nnam also said that the unnatural ripening process often results in fruits losing essential vitamins and micronutrients, particularly vitamin C, which deteriorates due to chemical exposure.
The nutritionist added that consuming large quantities of fruits ripened with paracetamol can as well bring about symptoms of acute poisoning, such as nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and even liver failure in severe cases.
She noted, “The improper disposal of used paracetamol tablets and the chemical residues left on fruits can also contaminate soil and water sources, creating environmental hazards.”
Safer alternatives to artificial ripening
Experts have noted that there are several safer alternatives to ripening these fruits than using harmful substances. and according to Nnam, one of them is natural artificial ripening.
She said, “The ripening process is carried out using natural ripening agents and methods (without the aid of chemical substances).
“Example is ripening by fumes, increasing the ripening rate by placing in a closed container, and placing fruits like apple, avocado, etc., along with unripe bananas promotes ripening to a greater extent.”
She affirmed that the natural method was the best.
“This simple method practised in the household is meant to trigger ripening and to keep the unripe fruit inside an airtight drum containing rice or wheat.
“The fruits stored in such a way ripen quickly because of the accumulation of ethylene gas and the self-heating nature of grains. Rice and wheat grains differ in their seed dormancy, which affects the seed respiration rate.
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“Respiration of rice or wheat grains produces carbon dioxide, which induces ethylene biosynthesis in several fruits. Since respiration is higher in rice than in wheat, unripe fruits placed in rice ripen faster than those in wheat.
“Another alternative is spreading unripe fruits in layers over paddy husk or wheat straw for a week to ripen,” she explained.
A public health researcher, Grandeur Malite, shed light on an experiment where various packaging materials—plastic bags, poly sheets, wooden boxes, and open-air (as a control)—were combined with natural ethylene sources such as avocado, mango, and tomato were used for fruit ripening. He noted that they were tested as two factors, explaining, “One packaging material contained one plant ethylene source at a time, with equal weights of the three ethylene sources used separately for each. This created 12 treatments with three replications, resulting in 36 experimental units. Samples of unripe bananas were placed in each unit.
“The results showed that bananas placed with avocado ripened first in six days, followed by tomato in 6.5 days and mango in 7.1 days.
“In terms of containers, bananas placed in a wooden box ripened fastest, while those in a poly sheet took the longest time. Based on this experiment, using avocado in combination with a wooden box provides the shortest ripening period without compromising the quality of the fruit,” he concluded.
Regulatory concerns and public awareness
The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control in Nigeria had severally raised concerns over the use of unsafe artificial ripening agents, including paracetamol, calcium carbide, and other dangerous chemicals.
NAFDAC warned about the inherent health risks and called for increased public education on the dangers of these practices while urging stricter regulatory actions against offenders.
The Director-General of NAFDAC, Prof Moji Adeyeye, who was represented by the Director, Chemical Evaluation and Research, Dr Patrick Omopariola, while speaking during a sensitisation workshop tagged, “Dangers of drug hawking and ripening of fruits with carbide” organised in 2023, urged Nigerians to stop eating fruits ripened with chemicals.
She said that the ignorance of safe methods had made many people to adopt unhealthy practices, which had caused health issues and claimed several lives.
“There have been clarion calls by well-meaning Nigerians on the need to take stringent regulatory actions to stem the dangerous tide of drug hawking and ripening of fruits with calcium carbide.
“In addition, several national dailies and non-governmental organisations have raised concerns on the looming danger and health implications of these two nefarious activities by certain unpatriotic and unscrupulous citizens in our country,” she said.
The NAFDAC boss charged participants to assume the role of champions in the vanguard of the campaign against drug hawking and the use of calcium carbide to ripen fruits, as well as other unsafe practices of food preservation.
She also said that the menace of drug hawking posed a serious challenge to the healthcare delivery system in the country and underscored NAFDAC’s resolute determination to totally eradicate the unwholesome practice.
READ ALSO: NAFDAC Warns Nigerians Of Fake Anti-malaria Drugs In Circulation
“Drugs are sensitive life-saving commodities, which should not be sold on the streets, in motor parks, or open markets, just like any other article of trade.
“I wish to warn that any drug hawker arrested by NAFDAC will be prosecuted and our enforcement officers are currently carrying out a synchronised nationwide operation.
“No offender will be spared from facing the full wrath of the law,” Adeyeye said.
According to Adeyeye, drug hawkers are also the major distributors and suppliers of narcotics to criminal networks, such as bandits, insurgents, kidnappers, and armed robbers.
“Drug hawkers constitute a serious threat to our national security,” she further said.
In a personal remark, Omopariola said that the dangers of using artificial methods to ripen fruits include loss of vitamins and micronutrients, adding that consumption of dangerous chemicals, such as arsenic, is carcinogenic, and that phosphorus, can lead to health issues and death.
He identified Calcium Carbide, Acetylene, Ethephon, Ethylene, and Ethylene glycol as the five most commonly used artificial ripeners in the country.
According to him, there are safe alternatives and Nigerians should embrace them.
In a presentation, the Director of Food Safety and Applied Nutrition in the agency, Mrs Eva Edwards, highlighted the dangers of food fraud and its impacts on public health.
He said that at least 200,000 Nigerians, including pregnant women and children under five, die annually from consuming contaminated food, hence the need for awareness creation on food safety.
Also, in July 2020, the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research, Innovation, and Strategic Partnerships), University of Ibadan, Professor Adenike Adeyemo, warned that many of the toxic chemicals added as preservatives are not safe for human consumption.
The professor of Aquatic Epidemiology and Toxicology, declared that the perpetrators are ignorant of the health implications of the act and tend to get away with the atrocity because the quantity of the poison added is small and usually takes a long time before its side effects are noticed.
Although Nigeria lacks statistics on the health effects of these toxic preservatives in foods, the academic said, “There is an increase in diseases such as cancer, birth defects, kidney failure, and diabetes in children. These diseases don’t just happen.
READ ALSO: NAFDAC Shuts 10 Bakeries, Eight Water Factories In Rivers
“It is a function of what an individual breathes in or eats.”
According to her, toxic preservatives have cumulative effects on the body, even though they do not kill immediately when consumed.
“It is something that we need to take more seriously. It is something that is very scary. As humans, our body mass is large and the quantity that we eat is not massive, so we would not die immediately or know that these things are causing harm.
“By the time the effect, kidney or liver problems, or cancer, starts to show—maybe 10 or 15 years after—nobody will link it to what was eaten in the past.”
Also, the Director of Drug Metabolism and Toxicology Research Laboratories, University of Ibadan, Professor Olatunde Farombi, stated that although the practice of adding toxic preservatives to food items, including fish, vegetables, and fruits, is common, it is not official.
According to him, while many traders use carbide to ripen fruits such as oranges, mangoes, and bananas to preserve them, some spray chemical compounds like Sniper, a brand of pesticide, on beans to prevent weevils from infesting them.
Farombi said, “These practices are illegal. All these chemicals can affect a wide range of body systems and cause liver failure, cancer, kidney failure, and brain damage. Can you imagine people using an old tyre to roast a cow? The tyre contains a lot of toxic substances that can contaminate the meat.
“Some people use formalin, a chemical used to preserve corpses in the morgue, to preserve fish in cold rooms before eventually selling them to people for consumption.”
Preventive measures
Experts have noted that education, tighter regulation, and safer practices would help to solve this problem.
A food safety expert, Samuel Essien, noted, “Public awareness campaigns can educate farmers and sellers about the dangers of using chemicals for ripening.
“Stronger food safety regulations, including testing of fruits for chemical residues, are crucial. Encouraging traditional ripening methods and providing safer, regulated ripening agents can mitigate these risks.”
He added, “It is evident and already proved by many researchers that the use of chemical agents such as calcium carbide, ethephon, ethylene glycol, calcium chloride, and inducing ripening by fumes from kerosene is highly hazardous and may be fatal if consumed.
“It is always best to use naturally induced methods of artificial ripening by placing bananas with avocado, apples, etc., or by using fumes from dried leaves or straws.”
PUNCH
Headline
US: Four Killed, 10 Others Wounded In California Shooting
Four people were confirmed dead and 10 others injured after a shooting at a family gathering in California, United States on Saturday night, according to US police, who described the attack as a “targeted incident.”
The incident occurred inside a banquet hall in Stockton, northeast of San Francisco, shortly before 6:00 pm, spokesperson for the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office, Heather Brent, told reporters during a news briefing.
Brent said the victims, ranging from “juveniles to adults,” were rushed to nearby hospitals, noting that details about the shooting remained limited.
READ ALSO:FULL LIST: US To Review Green Cards From 19 ‘Countries Of Concern’ After Washington Shooting
“What we have confirmed at this time is that there was a banquet hall where a family was celebrating. We have 14 victims of this shooting. Four of those are deceased,” Brent said.
“Early indications suggest that this may be a targeted incident. Investigators are exploring all possibilities at this time.”
The sheriff’s office posted on social media that detectives were “working to determine the circumstances leading up to this tragedy.”
READ ALSO:Police Begin Trial Of Officer In Fatal Shooting Of Enugu Musician
“We are urging anyone with information, video footage, or who may have witnessed any part of this incident to contact the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office immediately,” the post added.
Authorities said no suspect had been identified at the time of the report.
California Governor Gavin Newsom was briefed on the development, his office said in a social media statement.
Data from the Gun Violence Archive shows there have been 504 mass shootings in the United States so far this year, including the Stockton attack.
(AFP)
Headline
FULL LIST: US To Review Green Cards From 19 ‘Countries Of Concern’ After Washington Shooting
The Trump administration announced on Thursday that it will review the immigration status of all permanent residents, or “Green Card” holders, from Afghanistan and 18 other countries following the attack on National Guard troops in Washington, D.C.
U.S. officials identified the suspect in Wednesday’s shooting as a 29-year-old Afghan national who previously worked alongside American forces in Afghanistan.
The individual was granted asylum earlier this year, not permanent residency, according to AfghanEvac, an organisation that assists Afghans resettled in the United States after the Taliban takeover in 2021.
“I have directed a full-scale, rigorous reexamination of every Green Card for every alien from every country of concern,” said Joseph Edlow, director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), on X.
READ ALSO:FG To Unveil Digital Single Travel Emergency Passport January
The review follows a June executive order from President Trump classifying 19 countries as “of Identified Concern.”
The order banned entry for nearly all nationals from 12 countries, including Afghanistan. The full list of these countries is:
Afghanistan
Myanmar
Chad
Congo-Brazzaville
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Haiti
READ ALSO:Coup: ECOWAS Suspends Guinea-Bissau
Iran
Libya
Somalia
Sudan
Yemen
A partial travel ban applies to seven additional countries, though some temporary work visas remain allowed: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela.
Headline
Romanian Defence Minister Quits After Admitting Error In Academic Record
Romania’s defence minister resigned on Friday after saying he made a “mistake” on his CV about his university education, as controversy swirled over alleged lies on his resume.
Ionut Mosteanu – who has admitted to writing on his CV that he graduated from a university he never attended – said he did not want the row “to distract” the NATO member at a time when it and Europe are “under attack from Russia”.
Romania has repeatedly seen drone fragments fall on its soil since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, and reported a number of drone incursions.
On Tuesday, a drone crashed in eastern Romania, which borders Ukraine.
READ ALSO:Ukraine: 122,000 Nigerians, Others Protest Discrimination At Romanian, Hungarian, Polish Borders
Romania has also accused Moscow of “hybrid attacks”, including meddling in presidential elections last year that were subsequently annulled.
“Today, I resigned from my position as minister of national defence,” Mosteanu said in a Facebook post, adding he wanted the country to be focused on its “difficult mission”.
“Romania and Europe are under attack from Russia. Our national security must be defended at all costs,” he added.
Mosteanu had come under pressure after a media investigation published on Thursday revealed that he wrote in a CV that he graduated from a university which he did not actually attend.
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That same day he apologised for what he called “a mistake”.
“In a CV I quickly put together in 2016 using a template I found online, there is a mistake that I admit embarrasses me. I didn’t pay much attention to these details at the time,” he said on Facebook.
Mosteanu was appointed defence minister in June of this year, when a new pro-European government was formed after months of political turmoil.
Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan said in a press release that he would propose economy and tourism minister Radu Miruta take over the defence portfolio in the interim.
AFP
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