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Title: What standards and regulations affect a food and beverage laboratory?

Author for citation: Shawn E. Douglas

License for content: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International

Publication date:

Introduction

This brief topical article will examine the standards, regulations, and other factors globally influencing not only the demand for food and beverage laboratories, but also how they conduct their activities.

Globally recognized food safety standards

Implementing and maintaining conformance to internationally recognized and benchmarked food safety standards benefit the food and beverage organization in a number of ways[1][2]:

  • It increases customer confidence through the organization's audited certification to the standard, taking the place of customers' own auditing methods to ensure quality and authenticity, in turn reducing time and costs.
  • It drives organizations to better monitor their activities for non-conformities, identify root causes, and develop preventative controls, while clearly reporting such efforts to customers, further reducing the need for customer audits.
  • It better ensures a rigorous and comprehensive approach to product safety, quality, integrity, and legality, in many cases meeting or exceeding local, state, federal, and/or international legislative requirements.
  • It drives organizations to better vet their suppliers and service providers for meeting required food safety management practices.
  • It enables organizations to better demonstrate auditable compliance with modern food safety management practices.
  • It allows organizations to limit product recalls, reduce customer complaints, and better protect their brand.

British Retail Consortium (BRC) Global Standard for Food Safety (GSFS)

In 1998, the British Retail Consortium (BRD) published the first edition of its Global Standard for Food Safety (GSFS), going on to becoming an internationally recognized standard of best practices in food manufacturing, storage, and distribution. The standard covers stakeholder buy-in on continual improvement, food safety plan development, food quality management system development, manufacturing and storage site standardization, product and process control, personnel management, risk management, and trade product management.[1][2] [3] The standard is implemented by an organization through gap assessment, documentation development, consultation and assessment, internal auditing, and resolving non-conformances to the standard.[2]

Codex Alimentarius

Codex Alimentarius

Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI)

Global Food Safety Initiative

Hazard analysis and critical control points (HACCP)

Hazard analysis and critical control points

International Featured Standards (IFS)

International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 22000

ISO 22000

Safe Quality Food (SQF)

Regulations and laws around the world

Food Safety Act 1990 and Food Standards Act 1999 - United Kingdom

Food Safety Act 1990 and Food Standards Act 1999

Food Safety and Standards Act of 2006 - India

Food Safety Law - China

Food Safety Law

Food Sanitation Act and Food Safety Basic Act - Japan

Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) - United States

Food Safety Modernization Act

General Food Law Regulation (GFLR) - European Union

https://food.ec.europa.eu/horizontal-topics/general-food-law_en

Safe Foods for Canadians Act (SFCA) - Canada

Other influencing factors

Good manufacturing practice (GMP)

Good manufacturing practice


Conclusion

This brief topical article sought to answer "what standards and regulations affect a food and beverage laboratory?" It notes that

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Pavlović, A. (26 June 2017). "What is BRC? Global food safety standard explained". Ideagen Blog. Ideagen Limited. https://www.ideagen.com/thought-leadership/blog/what-is-brc-global-food-safety-standard-explained. Retrieved 10 November 2022. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "BRCGS - British Retail Consortium Global Standard" (PDF). Perry Johnson Food Safety Consulting, Inc. April 2020. https://www.pjfsc.com/Downloads/BRC-Overview.pdf. Retrieved 10 November 2022. 
  3. British Retail Consortium (August 2018). "Global Standard Food Safety" (PDF). British Retail Consortium. https://cdn.scsglobalservices.com/files/program_documents/brc_food_standard_8_0.pdf. Retrieved 10 November 2022.