Food safety and food quality should be used as a competitive
advantage
There has been more change in the food safety
landscape in the last few years compared to the previous 30.
The firm said over the years major drivers have
included consumers, regulation and retailers. World Health Day is being
celebrated recently (7 April), with WHO highlighting the challenges and opportunities
associated with food safety under the slogan of “From farm to plate, make food
safe.”
Technology driving change Kevin Habas, global
scientific marketing and education manager, said the US Food Safety and
Modernization Act (FSMA) is now having an impact and the Global Food Safety
Initiative (GFSI) was an earlier driving force.
The change has been because industry in the past few
years has overseen more technology develop than ever before. There has been
more change in the past five to 10 years than the prior 30, it is more
competitive in the space and some of that is driven by consumer groups.
These advocacy groups want fresh, local, organic and non-GMO
food. Despite companies best efforts there are still global recalls and a few
of the best companies in the world are sometimes implicated.” Today people
assume, and rightly so, that all food they eat is safe. It is the government’s
obligation to ensure that and the FDA or the USDA or their equivalents around
the world must have the systems in place to make sure. “
Retailers are also involved as they have private label
products that must be consistent and ensure uniformity and they are driving
more standards around audits.
3M Food Safety
provides indicator tests, sample handling, pathogen detection, hygiene and time
temperature monitoring. The firm has worked with Dr Martin Wiedmann at Cornell
University on quick time to results. Quicker reaction time is possible today to
respond in one tenth of the time than previously detect where any problem is
coming from, isolate it and find the cause to get it out of the marketplace.
A newer issue is information overload as there is so
much data, you need the right data and in the right amounts. It is more of an issue
as digitalized to find the important information and information to track. Things such as temperature, line speed and
pressure are monitored as well as all the chemical and microbiological test
results and you need to make sense of it all.
A ‘one size fits all’ approach does not apply to food
safety. Food safety is not viewed as public health until a recall as there is
no hard link.
Critical control points include sanitation schedules
and robust hygiene monitoring plans, incoming raw materials and food contact
surface testing. It is extremely important to increase awareness of issues
globally, to promote best practice sharing and elevate the conversation.
Source: 3M Food Safety
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