Food Labeling

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Transcript Food Labeling

Implement
Food Safety
Procedures
SITXFSA001A
DHS V2.1 2011
 Handouts: Labelling and the
Australian 12 main areas.
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- Packaging and labeling.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Protect public health and safety, e.g. allergen labeling.
 Provide adequate information for an informed choice,
e.g. country of origin.
 Prevent misleading or deceptive conduct,
e.g. description of the product.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
Note: refer to class handout: ‘Food Labeling Guide’ (ACCC)
DHS V2.1 2011
 FSANZ develops and reviews food standards
for Australia and New Zealand.
 Food Regulation Ministerial Council
provides broad policy on food issues and
reviews food standards approved by FSANZ.
 A variety of other state and commonwealth agencies
are involved in policy and regulation.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 NOT FSANZ!
 Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service
monitor and enforce imported foods.
 Authorities in Australian States and Territories
enforce the Code.
 New Zealand Food Safety Authority enforces
the Code in NZ.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Before 2002, the Nutrition Information Panel (NIP) was
only required on food making a nutrition claim.
 Now mandatory on most packaged foods.
 Must show energy protein, fat, saturated fat, carbohydrate,
sugars and sodium.
 Quantity per serving column for information on the nutrient
content of the portion, per 100 g to compare products.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Food sold at fundraising events do not need labeling
unless a customer requests information about the food.
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The label can be handwritten and should include:
a description of the food
list of ingredients
best before or use by dates
identification of the presence of allergens
storage conditions, i.e. keep refrigerated
the name of the person who made the food or an identification
of who made the food, i.e. the stall name or number, so that
it can be traced of there is a problem.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Always had to be stated on packaged food, but sometimes
this was only listed in the address of the manufacturer!
 Alternatively, the label could state that the product was
packaged in a particular country from local and
imported products.
 Some unpackaged food had to be labeled as ‘Imported’
but there was no requirement to state the actual country
or to label unpackaged local food as Australian!
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Note: this Standard applies only in Australia.
 Fresh or processed fruit, vegetable, nuts and seafood that are unpackaged will
have to state the country of origin of the food, whether it is from Australia or
another country.
 Unpackaged fresh pork and unpackaged preserved pork products, such as
ham and bacon, also have to have
country of origin labeling.
 Almost all packaged foods must make a clear country of
origin statement, the address is no longer good enough
(from December 2007).
 ‘Grown In Australia’ label joins the existing country of origin
‘Made in’ and ‘Product of’ and will provide consumers with
clearer advice about the source of many food products
(from January 2011).
Reference: FSANZ
DHS V2.1 2011
• Is there a substantial health/safety issue, who is at risk?
• What are the dietary intakes of nutrient or food chemical of interest, what
would happen if the intakes changed, what food categories are important?
• Are consumers interested, do they understand the information, will they
change their behavior, are there differences between sub-groups, will it affect
consumer confidence?
• What is the situation in the marketplace, what products are effected, sales
figures, trends, developments, practical restraints, are there non-regulatory
measures in place?
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
• What are the benefits, what are the costs, is there evidence of market failure,
does it effect competitiveness?
• Is there existing national and international regulation, is existing regulation
adequate, promoting consistency, are there legal restraints, what is best
practice?
• Is it enforceable, who enforces, how do we know it is working?
Are there potential barriers to trade?
• Is there any policy guidance?
• What do stakeholders think? What do YOU think?
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
Consumers: different groups may be affected differently, choices, costs,
consumer interests, autonomy, confidence, behavior.
Industry: costs and benefits, marketing, re-labeling, reformulation, innovation,
trade, training, monitoring.
Jurisdictions: enforcing the Code, training, application, costs and
Resources.
Regulators: education, review, monitoring, consumer confidence, flow-on
effects.
Health Professionals: education, recommendations, practicalities.
Non-government organisations: costs, practicalities, education.
Government organisations: policy, education, review, regulatory impact,
consumer and industry interests.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
• There is a clear direct or indirect benefit
• Consumers are not mislead, instead they are supplied enough
information to make an informed choice
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Labeling is an effective tool to address the issue
There are no other measures that already address the issue
Benefits outweigh the costs
There is evidence to support the requirements
The measure matches the risk
The measure is practical and enforceable
Consistent with FSANZ objectives
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
1.2.1 - Application of labeling (currently under review)
1.2.2 - Food identification
1.2.3 - Mandatory warning and advisory statements
1.2.4 - Labeling of ingredients
1.2.5 - Date marking
1.2.6 - Directions for use and storage
1.2.7 - Health, nutrition and related claims (current proposal)
1.2.8 - Nutrition information
1.2.9 - Legibility requirements (review planned)
1.2.10 - Characterising ingredients
1.2.11 - Country of origin
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 FSANZ is required to set food standards for New
Zealand and Australia that:
- protect the public health and safety of food consumers;
- ensure consumers are informed about the food they
buy; and
- prevent deceptive and misleading conduct.
 Our food measures should also:
- support an innovative food industry; and
- ensure consistency with international obligations.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Consumers have information on food labels divided into 12
different sections - can you think of all 12?
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12.
Nutrition information panel.
Percentage labeling.
Name or description of the food.
Food recall information.
Information for allergy sufferers.
Date marking.
Ingredient list.
‘Labels must tell the truth’.
Food additives.
Legibility requirements.
Directions for use and storage.
Country of origin.
DHS V2.1 2011
DHS V2.1 2011
 The label must show the key or ‘characterising’ ingredient.
 Some products like white bread or cheese have no characterising
ingredient.
 Sometimes it is a component of the food,
e.g. cocoa in chocolate.
 For this yoghurt it is the fruit which must be listed separately (because of
the pictures of fruit):
banana (8%), strawberry(8%), grape (4%), peach
(2%) and pineapple (2%).
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Only required if shelf life less than 2 years.
 Best before date – still safe to eat after this date but may
have lost quality and some nutrition.
 Use-by – cannot be legally sold nor should be consumed
after this date.
 Bread can have a ‘baked on’ or ‘baked for’ date.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Listed in descending order (by ingoing weight), so the
greatest amount is first.
 Look to see if fat, sugar or salt (sodium) are near the
beginning of this list.
 Water is also listed but allowance is made for processing,
e.g. evaporation or if lower than 5%.
 Compound ingredients do not need to be listed separately
if less than 5%, e.g. tomato sauce on a frozen pizza.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Fair trading and food laws require labels
to be truthful.
 For example, jam with a picture of
strawberries
on the label must contain strawberries.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Labeling requirements in the Food Standards
Code include that it must be legible, prominent,
distinct from the background and in English.
 Warning statements must be at least 3mm
high
(except small packages).
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Specific storage conditions must be on the
label so the product will keep until its best
before or use-by date, e.g. ‘keep refrigerated at
or below 4C.
 Also follow any cooking instruction the
manufacturer has put on the label.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Food additives play an important role,
e.g. preservatives, sweeteners.
 Can only be used if approved by FSANZ.
 Must be listed in ingredients list by name or number
(unless in a composite food that is less than 5%).
 Full list is on FSANZ website.
http://www.foodstandards.gov.au/foodmatters/foodadditives.cfm
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Major allergens that can cause severe anaphylactic shock
must be listed however small the amount.
 These are: peanuts, tree nuts (e.g. almonds, cashews,
walnuts), shellfish, finfish, milk, eggs, sesame and Soybeans.
 See Anaphylaxis Australia website
www.allergyfacts.org.au or Allergy New Zealand
www.allergy.org.nz
 Also listed are gluten for celiac disease and sulphites
(if more than 10mg/kg) as sulphites can trigger asthma
attacks in some asthmatics.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 GM food and irradiated food and food ingredients must go
through a safety assessment by FSANZ before being sold.
 GM food must be labeled if there is altered DNA or protein
in the final product (or if it has altered characteristics).
 Irradiated food and food ingredients must also be labeled.
 Note: food irradiation can only be used if there is
no other safe method.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 In Australia, packaged (and some unpackaged food)
must state the country where it was made or produced.
 ‘Product of [Country]’, Made in [Country] or
Made in [Country] from local and imported ingredients.
 Note: this does not apply in New Zealand,
as this only applies to wines.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Labels must show the name and address of the
manufacturer or importer.
 Also the lot identification (or date coding).
 This assists in the rare occasion when there is a food recall.
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
 Much of the information on food labels is not regulated in the Food
Standards Code,
e.g. organic, kosher, halal, vegetarian labeling of foods.
 For full explanations of symbols commonly used on food labels (e.g.
glycemic index) see Nutrition Australia’s website
www.nutritionaustralia.org under food facts.
 Also for information on the food industry’s percentage daily intake labeling
scheme see: http://www.afgc.org.au/index.cfm?id=436
Reference: Food Standards Australia New Zealand.
DHS V2.1 2011
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In groups, you have 20 minutes to research the following additive numbers for main
points / information in the LRC (library).
For example find out if your specific additives:
cause any allergic reactions
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have any fatal ingredients
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are banned in Australia and / or other countries
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have products associated with them
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have any side affects.
and any other relevant or interesting facts related to them.
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1.
3.
5.
7.
9.
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310 (E310) + 319 (E319)
2. 320 (E320) + 321 (E321)
322 (E322) + 326 (E326)
4. 330 (E330) + 338 (E338)
363 (E363) + 370 (E370) + 385 (E385)
6. E902 + 903 (E903) + 904 (E904) + E907
E910 + E912 + E914 + E920
8. E924 + 925 (E925) + E927(a) + 928 (E928)
950 (E950) + 951 (E95) + E952 + 954 (E954) 10. 955 + 965 (E965) + 1202 (E1202)
You will then present your findings to the rest of the class for discussion and feedback.
DHS V2.1 2011
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Any questions or clarification?
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Why is it worth labelling food?
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What are 6 of the 12 areas
covered by Australian labelling?
What are 3 examples of
ingredients that are printed
in bold?
DHS V2.1 2011
 Handouts: Food Recall Protocol.
 Slides - Overview of:
• Cleaning
• Food Recall
• Pest Control
• Maintenance
• Disposal (recycling)
- Which records do you complete for each?
 Class Activity - Cleaning Schedule Revision
DHS V2.1 2011