Dutch food
safety company Micreos looks poised to gain approval for its Listeria-fighting
bacteriophage processing aid in Australasia after safety authorities there said
they had no concerns about the product.
The company
– formerly known as EBI Food Safety – told FoodProductionDaily.com that opening
up the markets in Australia and New Zealand had the potential to provide
significant new revenue streams.
“Food
safety awareness is very high in both countries,” Micreos CEO Mark Offerhaus
said.”We already have approval in Europe, the US, Canada and Asia, so this was
a logical extension.”
Food
Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) today launched the first of two public consultation
exercises on Listex P100. It has invited comments on the product from the food
industry, official bodies and consumers before 1 November, 2011.
Ready-to-eat
foods
The
Netherlands-based company applied for permission to use the bacteriophage preparation
as a processing aid for ready-to-eat foods.
The
bacteriophage is designed for use as a spray or dip for targeted application on
food products and not as a surface disinfectant or general bactericide within
the processing facility, said the agency.
“Processing
aids can’t legally be used in food production without a rigorous safety
assessment by FSANZ,” said the body’s CEO, Steve McCutcheon.
The safety
agency said it had already completed the assessment in terms of the product’s
efficacy in reducing Listeria monocytogenes on contaminated food and limiting
its growth.
Safe and
effective
“FSANZ has
concluded that the P100 preparation is safe, effective and has no on-going
technological function when used under commercial conditions in non-liquid
ready-to-eat foods,” it added.
The P100
bacteriophage would not infect any other bacteria except Listeria. They are
harmless to plants, animals or humans and do not alter the properties of food,
disintegrating into natural compounds such as amino acids, said FSANZ.
Bacteriophages,
the most abundant biological entities on earth, infect bacteria and multiply
inside them until the bacteria breaks down. They are naturally present in high
numbers in the environment, in saltwater, freshwater, soil, plants and animals
(including people) and food.
McCutcheon
said that there would be a second round of public comment later in the
application process before a recommendation on the application to the FSANZ
Board.
Fuente: foodproductiondaily
Aporte: Cristián García
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