What's New Unreplied Topics Membership About Us Contact Us Privacy Policy
[Ad]

Should I be viewing the food manufacturing plant as my consumer?

Started by , Oct 15 2018 03:47 PM
2 Replies

I am trying to write the policies for FSSC 22000, but I come from the distribution world. In the food packaging standards (we make glass bottles) they talk about the "consumer" and or "customer". As I am reviewing their HACCP plan in place it seems to focus more on the food manufacturing plants that will be receiving our product and the dangers to them, is that the way it should be or should we be focused on what risks would be to the customer after the manufacturing plant has put the contents in the bottle? For example if the Annealing does not occur then of course when the food manufacture goes to fill our glass the glass will blow up. That could cause significant risk if we do not have a control point in place, but the risk is not for the consumer.....should I be viewing the food manufacturing plant as my consumer?

Share this Topic
Topics you might be interested in
What’s the hardest part of building a strong food safety culture? Scary Halloween Food Safety Moments... I am trying to package a 4.4pH food product into a container that deforms at 140-150 degrees. HFH vs CFH vs other options? SQF: Why Environmental Monitoring Is a Pet Food Plant's Early-Warning System Is anyone here attending Gulfood Manufacturing next week?
[Ad]

The manufacturer is your customer

 

The end user is the consumer

 

So in terms of glass containers, they need to be safe for the contents AND processing the manufacturer will use

 

For the end user, your glass shouldn't contain anything that MAY react with contents rendering the food within unfit for consumption

 

We purchase our glass from domestic and international sources.............the FDA does recognize glass as GRAS (generally regarded as safe), but the onus is on you to ensure your glass does not contain, say lead, and that they are the correct container for each application 

 

Hope that helps

I am trying to write the policies for FSSC 22000, but I come from the distribution world. In the food packaging standards (we make glass bottles) they talk about the "consumer" and or "customer". As I am reviewing their HACCP plan in place it seems to focus more on the food manufacturing plants that will be receiving our product and the dangers to them, is that the way it should be or should we be focused on what risks would be to the customer after the manufacturing plant has put the contents in the bottle? For example if the Annealing does not occur then of course when the food manufacture goes to fill our glass the glass will blow up. That could cause significant risk if we do not have a control point in place, but the risk is not for the consumer.....should I be viewing the food manufacturing plant as my consumer?

 

Hi lauralsalah,

 

HACCP objective is  to provide the final consumer of the finished food product with a safe-to-eat, packaged food.

 

The HACCP system was initially based around the details of the flow chart of the  food "manufacturing" stage for which you are providing one "food grade" input.

 

Subsequently Packaging manufacturers borrowed/interpreted  food haccp methodologies to ensure the safety of their finished product.

 

You should probably regard yourself as a Packaging supplier whose Product safety "status" (ie "Food Grade") represents one "Prerequisite"  Input to the food manufacturing process. IIRC some food haccp texts, depending on the specifics, conceptualise the supplier to represent an "external" critical control point.


Similar Discussion Topics
What’s the hardest part of building a strong food safety culture? Scary Halloween Food Safety Moments... I am trying to package a 4.4pH food product into a container that deforms at 140-150 degrees. HFH vs CFH vs other options? SQF: Why Environmental Monitoring Is a Pet Food Plant's Early-Warning System Is anyone here attending Gulfood Manufacturing next week? BRC Non-Conformance: Are Ear Gauges Considered Prohibited Jewelry in Non-Food Handling Areas? Restricting access to a small sanitation chemical dispenser/station to comply with food defense New ISO 22002 Changes for Food Packaging Manufacturers Allowable Food Ingredients in Saudi Arabia ISO 22002 2025 Change Summary - Food Manufacturing