The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
has warned Dr Pepper Snapple Group (DPS) bottler the American Bottling Company
after an inspection revealed serious HACCP failings at a Texas plant. In a
letter to the company dated July 10, but published yesterday, the FDA said an
inspection of the firm’s facility in Irving, Texas revealed serious violations
of Regulation 21, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 120, relating to juice
hazard analysis and critical control points (HACCP).
“Your ReaLemon and lime juices are
adulterated in that they have been prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions
whereby they may have been rendered injurious to health,” FDA Dallas District
director Reynaldo R. Rodriguez wrote to American Bottling Company president and
CEO Larry Young (who is also DPS CEO and president).
Recounting “serious deviations” at the
site, the FDA told the managers that the company must include control measures
in its hazard analysis and HACCP plan to “consistently produce at a minimum, a
five-log* reduction of the pertinent microorganism for at least as long as the
shelf life of the product when stored under normal and moderate abuse
conditions”.
(*Log reduction relates to the relative
number of live microbes eliminated: a 5-log reduction involves lowering the
number of pathogenic microbes 100,000 fold). These were required under 21 CFR
120, the FDA wrote, but the company’s plan for its ReaLemon 100% Lemon Juice
and ReaLime 100% Lime Juice brands did not provide such controls in relation to
Listeria monocytogenes.
Only microbial verification studies
relating to Salmonella and E. coli
O157:H7 were evaluated, the FDA added, but “the pertinent microorganism in
the juice from these concentrates is
Listeria monocytogenes”.
Source: FDA
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