fonte:
ISO
1
September 2005
ISO
22000 for safe food supply chains
ISO
22000, published today, is a new International Standard designed to ensure
safe food supply chains worldwide.
ISO 22000:2005, Food safety management systems – Requirements for
any organization in the food chain, provides a framework of
internationally harmonized requirements for the global approach that is
needed. The standard has been developed within ISO by experts from the
food industry, along with representatives of specialized international
organizations and in close cooperation with the Codex Alimentarius
Commission, the body jointly established by the United Nations’ Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Health Organization (WHO) to
develop food standards.
A major resulting benefit is that ISO 22000 will make it easier for
organizations worldwide to implement the Codex HACCP (Hazard Analysis and
Critical Control Point) system for food hygiene in a harmonized way, which
does not vary with the country or food product concerned.
Food reaches consumers via supply chains that may link many different
types of organization and that may stretch across multiple borders. One
weak link can result in unsafe food that is dangerous to health – and
when this happens, the hazards to consumers can be serious and the cost to
food chain suppliers considerable. As food safety hazards can enter the
food chain at any stage, adequate control throughout is essential. Food
safety is a joint responsibility of all the actors in the food chain and
requires their combined efforts.
ISO 22000 is therefore designed to allow all types of organization within
the food chain to implement a food safety management system. These range
from feed producers, primary producers, food manufacturers, transport and
storage operators and subcontractors to retail and food service outlets
– together with related organizations such as producers of equipment,
packaging material, cleaning agents, additives and ingredients.
The standard has become necessary because of the significant increase of
illnesses caused by infected food in both developed and developing
countries. In addition to the health hazards, food-borne illnesses can
give rise to considerable economic costs covering medical treatment,
absence from work, insurance payments and legal compensation.
As a result, a number of countries have developed national standards for
the supply of safe food and individual companies and groupings in the food
sector have developed their own standards or programmes for auditing their
suppliers. The plethora of more than 20 different such schemes worldwide
generates risks of uneven levels of food safety, confusion over
requirements, and increased cost and complication for suppliers that find
themselves obliged to conform to multiple programmes.
ISO 22000, backed by international consensus, harmonizes the requirements
for systematically managing safety in food supply chains and offers a
unique solution for good practice on a worldwide basis. In addition, food
safety management systems that conform to ISO 22000 can be certified –
which answers the growing demand in the food sector for the certification
of suppliers – although the standard can be implemented without
certification of conformity, solely for the benefits it provides.
Developed with the participation of food sector experts, ISO 22000
incorporates the principles of HACCP, and covers the requirements of key
standards developed by various global food retailer syndicates, in a
single document.
“Public sector participation in the development of the ISO 22000 family
is also significant,” ISO Secretary-General Alan Bryden commented, “notably
that of the FAO/WHO’s Codex Alimentarius Commission, which is
responsible for the well-known HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control
Point) system for food hygiene. Thanks to the strong partnership between
ISO and Codex, ISO 22000 will facilitate the implementation of HACCP and
the food hygiene principles developed by this pre-eminent body in this
field.”
Another benefit of ISO 22000 is that it extends the successful management
system approach of the ISO 9001:2000 quality management system standard
which is widely implemented in all sectors but does not itself
specifically address food safety. The development of ISO 22000 was based
on the assumption that the most effective food safety systems are designed,
operated and continually improved within the framework of a structured
management system, and incorporated into the overall management activities
of the organization.
While ISO 22000 can be implemented on its own, it is designed to be fully
compatible with ISO 9001:2000 and companies already certified to ISO 9001
will find it easy to extend this to certification to ISO 22000. To help
users to do so, ISO 22000 includes a table showing the correspondence of
its requirements with those of ISO 9001:2000.
ISO
22000:2005 is the first in a family of standards that will include the
following documents:
ISO/TS
22004, Food safety management systems – Guidance on the application
of ISO 22000:2005, which will be published by November 2005, provides
important guidance that can assist organizations including small and
medium-sized enterprises around the world.
ISO/TS
22003, Food safety management systems – Requirements for bodies
providing audit and certification of food safety management systems,
will give harmonized guidance for the accreditation (approval) of ISO
22000 certification bodies and define the rules for auditing a food safety
management system as conforming to the standard. It will be published in
the first quarter of 2006.
ISO
22005, Traceability in the feed and food chain – General principles
and guidance for system design and development, will shortly be
circulated as a Draft International Standard.
In partnership with the International Trade Centre (ITC) – the technical
cooperation agency of the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) – ISO is
also preparing an easy-to-use check-list for small businesses and
developing countries, entitled ISO 22000: Are you ready?
ISO
22000 and ISO/TS 22004 are the output of working group WG 8, Food
safety management systems, of ISO technical committee ISO/TC 34, Food
products. Experts from 23 countries participated in the working group,
together with international organizations with liaison status. In addition
to the Codex Alimentarius Commission, these included the Confederation of
the Food and Drink Industries of the European Union (CIAA), the CIES/Global
Food Safety Initiative, and the World Food Safety Organization (WFSO).
They have been joined for the development of ISO/TS 22003 by experts from
the ISO committee on conformity assessment, ISO/CASCO, the International
Accreditation Forum (IAF) and the IQNet international certification
network.
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