I was wondering what everyone is doing for monitoring their chemical inventory. Not sure if this is only applicable to food-contact chemicals, sanitizers, hazardous chemicals or all chemicals used in Production?
Insights appreciated
Posted Yesterday, 08:41 PM
I was wondering what everyone is doing for monitoring their chemical inventory. Not sure if this is only applicable to food-contact chemicals, sanitizers, hazardous chemicals or all chemicals used in Production?
Insights appreciated
Posted Yesterday, 08:51 PM
I do an annual inventory on all chemicals, and keep a registry based on that. Some people are going to come in here and say that's not often enough but read your code and do your risk analysis and you determine if it's often enough.
For food contact chems, sanitation and janitorial I do weekly. I believe my PnP says 'at least monthly' but we do it weekly for ordering purposes.
Key here is to have a list and control every chemical in your plant, period. If there are new random chemicals, you have to close that loop and figure out why people are bringing unauthorized chemicals into your food plant.
It's also pretty nifty to use your chemical registry and have whoever is in charge of SDS's make sure they are verifying you have the current SDS on file. That's another reason to keep a complete registry.
Posted Today, 05:59 AM
All chemicals and cleaning agents used in the production areas are listed in the chemical register. The register includes information about the point of use, the latest update date of the safety data sheet, and the required protective equipment. During production walk-throughs, we record any chemicals we observe and verify that they appear on the list. We monitor the dates of cleaning agents and food-grade maintenance chemicals, and expired products must not be used in the production area. All chemicals and cleaning agents are kept locked away during production.
Posted Today, 07:16 AM
I'm not sure I'd strictly have a "monitoring" exercise for it but I'd have chemical listings in areas where they're stored and make it clear that the people who use them and order them (e.g. engineers, sanitation) should only use from and order from these lists. Then I'd verify via audit (monthly GMP and specific chemical systems audit which might be 1-2 times per year.)
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25 years in food. And it never gets easier.