The leaders of the Rospotrebnadzor anti-rating for availability in stores were kefir, cabbage and beets, Izvestia writes.
Drazen Zigic/Shutterstock/Fotodom
Rospotrebnadzor specialists analyzed the assortment of more than 43 thousand retail outlets in the country and assessed how accessible domestic food products are to the Russian population.
According to the results of the study, on average across the regions people can easily buy goods in stores, the overall assessment of retail availability was almost 80%. In most Russian regions, pasta, cheese, canned fish, yogurt, cooked sausage, milk, and canned meat are the most accessible to consumers. But the leaders of the Rospotrebnadzor anti-rating were kefir, cabbage, and beetroot – these products were found to have the lowest level of availability.
In 2022, the service made similar measurements, then the same items were the most accessible, and turkey and sauerkraut also became rarer goods.
Rospotrebnadzor has identified numerous violations in two Moscow cafes of the Shokoladnitsa chain
Rospotrebnadzor seized 350 kg of products from two Eurospar stores in the capital