1. Food Safety Standards and
certifications
Sayed Mohammad Naim KHALID
Technical Advisor at AARDO/CAARDO/SADA-O
April 2013
Kabul, Afghanistan
2. Contents
1. Food safety vs. Safe food
2. Certification
3. GFSI
4. Codex Alimentarius
5. Safe Quality Food (SQF)
6. British Retail Consortium (BRC)
7. International Food Safety (IFS)
8. ISO 22000
9. HACCP
10. Global GAP
2
3. Food
Security
Food
Safety
Food Safety, Safe Food?
• Food Safety
– Concept that food will not cause harm to the consumer when it is
prepared and/or consumed according to its intended use.
Safe Food
A product which is free of microbiological, chemical or physical hazards
OR
A product that does not cause illness or injury when consumed as
intended
3
4. Why Food Safety?
• Some of the reasons for concern about food
safety?
Changes in food habits
Food handling practices
Changing products, processes etc.
Globalization of trade in food
4
5. Lack of Hygiene & Unsafe water kills millions
of people in the world
Do we know?
5
6. What is Certification?
• It is a procedure for verifying that products
conform to certain standards, either
mandatory/compulsory or voluntarily.
• In the case of organic products, it is primarily
the acknowledgement that such products have
been produced according to the applicable
organic production standards.
6
7. Basic types of certification
• Mandatory or Compulsory (public)
When products are sold to mainstream domestic market or
exported, national governments & exporting countries normally
require standards & certification as part of food safety
regulations (e.g., MRLs on pesticides use,Product Traceability).
• Voluntary (private)
Decision to adhere to standards & apply for certification is
mainly a decision of the producing group for environmental,
social, cultural, food safety purposes.
7
8. Voluntary Certification Systems
(for agriculture and food products)
• Environmental certification
• Organic agriculture
• ISO 14001 certification
• Social certification
• Fair trade
• Social Accountability 8000 (SA8000)
• Food safety and good practice certification
• Good agricultural practices (GAP)
• Good manufacturing practice (GMP)
• Certification for intrinsic quality (cultural)
• Geographical indications (GI)
• Halal
8
9. Global Food Safety Initiative
(GFSI)
Food retailers from around the world agreed to a
common goal and strategy.
The Goal: Continuous improvement in food safety
management systems to ensure confidence in the
delivery of safe food to consumers
The Strategy: GFSI launched in 2000
GFSI is managed by CIES – The Food Business
Forum an international organization of food
businesses
9
10. GFSI Guidance Document
Standard = Key Elements
HACCP-Based Standards
Food Safety Management System
Best Practices
Regulatory requirements
Operation of certification process
Accreditation
Certification
Auditing
10
11. Codex Alimentarius
• In Latin, Codex = Law, Alimentarius = Food
• Hence, it is a “Food Law Commisson”
• Set up by WHO & FAO in 1962:
– World Health Organization
– Food and Agricultural Organization
• Aim:
– To protect health of consumers worldwide
– To guide food industry in defining standards
– Promote harmonization of standards and facilitate
international trade
– Standards for labelling, nutritional labelling, and HACCP
guidelines drawn in 1981, 1983, and 1993 respectively
11
12. Codex Alimentarius
• A Statutory Regulatory Body under Ministry of Health & Family
Welfare, Government of India
• Constituted on 5 Sep 2008
• Mandate of laying down science based standards for articles of
food and to regulate their manufacture, storage, distribution,
sale and import to ensure availability of safe and wholesome
food for human consumption.
12
13. Safe Quality Food (SQF)
• The Safe Quality Food Program (SQF) is a food
safety and quality management certification
system
• SQF can be applied at all levels of the food
supply chain
– SQF 1000 applies to farmers and producers
– SQF 2000 to food manufacturers and distributors
13
14. Why You Need SQF Certification
Access to top
retailers
Brand
protection
Maximize
efficiency and
consistency
Continuous
improvement
14
15. British Retail Consortium (BRC)
• The British Retail Consortium (or BRC) is one
of the leading trade associations in the UK
• They represent all forms of retailers from
small, independently owned stores, to big
chain stores and department stores.
• This standard is used as the benchmark for
food safety management.
15
16. BRC Global Standards
• The retailers, food producers, importers, caterers,
ingredient suppliers and the food service industry
can all benefit greatly from this standard.
• It is well known for its global standards in four
areas, producing much literature on these topics:
– Food safety
– Consumer products
– Packaging and packaging materials
– Storage and distribution
16
17. Benefits
• Enhances your food safety and food safety
management system
• Shows your commitment to producing safe food
• Achieves recognition and acceptance from the UK
retailer community
• Increases your customers product safety and
quality confidence
• Reduces the number of supplier
audits/assessments
17
18. International Food Safety (IFS)
• German and French food trade associations
created IFS.
• Benefits of the standard include enhanced
transparency along the food chain and a reduced
number of customer audits resulting in cost
savings.
• Certification to IFS by an independent third-party,
helps suppliers demonstrate to retailers that their
product safety, quality and legal obligations are
fulfilled.
18
19. Benefits
• commitment to supplying a safe quality food
product
• Enhances product assurance
• Minimizing product liability risks and recalls
• reduce both internal and external audit costs by
using one uniform standard
• raise your company's reputation, brand and
image
• Continuous improvement through ongoing
surveillance and corrective actions.
19
20. ISO 22000:2005
• ISO 22000 is an international standard ensures:
– worldwide safe food supply chains and
– provide a framework of internationally harmonised
requirements for the global approach that is needed.
• It implement the Codex Alimentarius HACCP
• Used by from farm to fork (all chain members)
• The standard can also be implemented solely for
the benefits it provides without certification of
conformity.
20
21. Benefits
Applies to all organizations in the global food supply chain.
System approach, rather than product approach.
Resource optimization ? internally and along the food chain.
All control measures subjected to hazard analysis.
Improved documentation.
Dynamic communication
A systematic and proactive approach to identification of food
safety hazards and development and implementation of
control measures.
21
22. HACCP
• Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point
• History: Pillsbury and NASA. Well Aged.
• 2 Functions: Systematic Approach
• Define & Characterize Hazards,
• Identify Critical Control Points (CCP’s)
22
23. Benefits
• Enables you to demonstrate a commitment to food
safety
• Conveys a degree of confidence required by
consumers, retailers and buyers in the food industry
• Provides buyers, consumers, government
enforcement and trade agencies with justified
assurance that control systems are in place to assure
the safe production of food
• Regular assessments help to continually monitor
food safety system
23
24. Global GAP
• Developed in 1997 in EU under the title Europe GAP
• designed to reassure consumers about how food is
produced on the farm by :
– minimizing detrimental environmental impacts of farming
operations,
– reducing the use of chemical inputs and ensuring a responsible
approach to worker health and safety as well as
– animal welfare.
• GLOBAL GAP is a private sector body that sets voluntary
standards for the certification of agricultural products
around the globe.
• It is an equal partnership of agricultural producers and
retailers
24
25. Key features of some standards
GFSI Benchmarked schemes5 International standards
BRC IFS SQF 2000 FSSC 22000 GlobalGAP
(FV)6
SQF 1000
ISO 22000 CODEX
Hygiene Principles
& other relevant
codes
Geographic
focus
British market German,
French and
Italian market
US and
Australian
market
Europe International
(mainly Europe)
US and Australian
market
International International
Owners British retail
members and
trade
associations
German,
French and
Italian retail
associations
US retailer
associations
Foundation
for Food
Safety
Certification
European retail
associations
US retailer
associations
International
Standards
Organization
FAO/WHO
End users (who
apply the std)
Food
manufacturer
Food
manufacturer
Food
manufacturer
Food
manufacturer
Primary
producers
Primary producers entire food chain entire food chain
25