The
Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is amending the Federal meat and poultry
products inspection regulations to remove sodium benzoate, sodium propionate, and
benzoic acid from the list of substances that the regulations prohibit for use
in meat or poultry products.
New
uses of these substances in meat or poultry products will continue to be approved
by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and by FSIS for
suitability. FSIS will add approved uses of these substances to the list of
approved substances contained in the Agency’s directive system.
The
proposed rule also explained that, under FSIS’s regulations, certain antimicrobial
substances are prohibited for use in meat or poultry products because these
substances have the potential to conceal damage or inferiority when used at
certain levels (9CFR 424.23(a)(3)). Among these
substances
are potassium sorbate, propylparaben (propyl phydroxybenzoate), calcium
propionate,
sodium
propionate, benzoic acid, and sodium benzoate.
In
2006, Kraft Foods Global, Inc. petitioned FSIS to amend the Federal meat and
poultry products inspection regulations to permit the use of sodium benzoate
and sodium propionate as acceptable antimicrobial agents that may be used in
combination with other approved ingredients to inhibit the growth of Listeria
monocytogenes (Lm) in ready-to-eat (RTE) meat and poultry products. On July 26,
2010, Kemin Food Technologies petitioned FSIS to amend the regulations to
permit the use of liquid sodium propionate and liquid sodium benzoate as acceptable
antimicrobial agents in meat and poultry.
Source:
Regulations.gov http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=FSIS-2011-0018-0022
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