Skip to Content

2019

Queen’s research team discovers new method which reduces arsenic in rice

Contamination of rice with arsenic is a major problem in some regions of the world with high rice consumption.

Andy Meharg

Researchers at Queen’s University Belfast have found a new way to reduce inorganic arsenic in rice by modifying processing methods at traditional, small-scale parboiling plants in Bangladesh. This new method also has the added benefit of increasing the calcium content of rice, the researchers say.

People in Bangladesh eat about a pound of rice per person per day, according to statistics from the International Rice Research Institute. This consumption is among the highest in the world, placing Bangladeshis at risk for elevated exposure to inorganic arsenic, a toxic substance and cancer causing agent that can enter rice from the soil of flooded paddies.

After harvest, most rice in the country is parboiled, a process that involves soaking the rough rice (with husk intact) in water and then boiling it, followed by other steps to produce polished white rice.

The research, published today in ACS journal Environmental Science & Technology was led by Professor Andrew Meharg from the Institute for Global Food Security at Queen’s University.

He wondered if parboiling wholegrain rice (with the husk removed) would reduce the levels of different forms of arsenic compared with parboiling rough rice. That’s because the husk can have high levels of inorganic arsenic, and it could also act as a barrier, preventing arsenic species from leaving the rest of the grain during parboiling.

Professor Meharg said: “There has long been a search for ways to remove arsenic from rice that is both low tech and can be widely adapted. Our research findings show that arsenic removal can be readily conducted using this post-harvest processing of rice.”

The researchers tested their new processing method in 13 traditional, small-scale parboiling plants throughout Bangladesh.  The team used chromatography along with in spectrometry to analyse arsenic species in rice.

They found that in untreated rough rice, inorganic arsenic is highly elevated in the bran compared with the husk. Parboiling wholegrain rice instead of parboiling rough rice reduced levels of inorganic arsenic by about 25 percent in the final polished grain, while increasing calcium by 213 percent. However, the new method reduced potassium by 40 percent. The researchers say that the potassium loss must be balanced with the advantages of reduced arsenic and increased calcium.

Professor Andy Meharg
Professor Andy Meharg
Featured Expert
Photo: Professor Andy Meharg

Professor Andy Meharg

Professor in School of Biological Sciences
Institute for Global Food Security (IGFS), School of Biological Sciences
Media

Media enquiries to Communications Officer, comms.officer@qub.ac.uk 028 9097 5292.

Share