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Pressure mounts
for a single global food safety certification standard
By Rick Pendrous
Published: 05 February,
2007
A single international standard for the
safety certification of food production premises moved a step closer last
week when stakeholders in the Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) agreed
the next steps forward.
The GFSI stakeholders met prior to the
CIES – The Food Business Forum’s safety conference held in Munich last week.
They agreed ways of dealing with non-conformities, auditor training and
auditor quality as they apply to competing standards which make up the draft
5th edition GFSI document. They also came up with new proposals on audit
frequencies.
Stakeholder views, together with those of
workings groups held during the conference, will be fed back to the GFSI’s
technical committee, which was behind the latest draft. These will be worked
on over the coming months.
As well as examining benchmarking to
provide improved transparency and auditor competence, the technical
committee will look at how GFSI can fit in with the International Standards
Organisations’ ISO 22000 standard for certification of food safety
management systems published in 2005.
The GFSI, led by the big retailers, was
launched in 2000 with the aim of harmonising food safety inspections and the
certification of food production premises. It now encompasses four different
standards, which are gradually converging, used throughout the world. These
are the BRC Global Standard, International Food Standard (IFS), Safe Quality
Food (SQF) Standard and the Dutch hazard analysis critical control point (HACCP)
Standard.
There is much disagreement, however, given
regional preferences and competition between the different standards, as to
whether a single standard will ever emerge. Some think acceptance of similar
– but slightly different – standards operating in parallel will be the most
likely outcome.
Roland Vaxelaire, director for quality,
responsibility and risk management at French retailer Carrefour, who
replaced Tesco product integrity manager Chris Anstey as chairman of the
GFSI board last year, said the idea was that a supplier “once certified, is
accepted everywhere”. Vaxelaire, who is also on the board of the European
Food safety Authority, added: “Common acceptance of the four GFSI standards
by retailers is very close.”
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