The Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) affects feed manufacturing through provisions involving the safety of food consumed by animals and safety for humans handling the food, particularly pet food.
“This law touches every aspect of feed
manufacturing: all ingredient processing, all feed manufacturing, all pet food,
all feed and ingredient imports and transportation,” according to Dr Henry
Turlington, director of quality and manufacturing regulatory affairs, American Feed Industry Association, at the International Rendering Symposium held during
the 2015 International Production & Processing Expo.
In his presentation on “FMSA and Its
Implication on Industry Certification Programs,” Dr Turlington observed that
the main component of the FSMA for the feed industry is hazard analysis. In a
nutshell, companies need to identify their hazards, ensure they are controlled
and have records to demonstrate it. Signed into law by President Obama in 2011,
the revised FSMA rule issued last September adds supplier verification, product
testing and environmental monitoring, with the latter two targeted at
pathogens.
According to Ansen Pond, product safety
manager, Darling Ingredients, quality control in the rendering industry has
multiple interpretations. For customers, quality may mean microbial control,
nutrients, product appearance, insects, traceability, freshness or other
factors. Which ranks highest will of course vary from customer to customer
depending on their product. But without food safety, the others diminish in
significance.
Mr Pond outlined the challenges of quality
and safety in the industry in his presentation on “Quality Assurance in the
Rendering Industry.” He explained that chemical, biological and physical safety
hazards all must be addressed. Biological hazards include Salmonella, E. coli
and viruses, while the primary chemical hazards are insecticides and pesticides.
Physical contaminants to watch for include wood, metal, plastic and glass.
Products must be pest-free and have a specific nutrient profile.
Kent Swisher, vice president of international programs, National Renderers Association, speaking at the International Rendering Symposium held during the 2015 IPPE. |
“The outlook for rendered products on the
global market appears to be favorable, although forecasts can be affected by
changing regulations, the opening of new factories, disease outbreaks and other
factors,” said Kent Swisher, vice president of international programs, National
Renderers Association, during his global market report on the rendering
industry.
To illustrate the extent to which one
action can make a substantial difference in international trade, Mr Swisher
explained that Singapore became a major importer of tallow in just a few years
due to the opening of a renewable fuel refinery in 2011.
He elaborated that China should also be
open soon for tallow imports from the United States, and fishmeal prices in the
burgeoning aquaculture industry should help support processed animal protein
meal demand.
Broadly, the rendering industry is in a
period of low commodity prices due to oversupply of soybeans and other crops,
as well as fluctuations in the price of oil produced by OPEC countries. This in
turn is related to trends in domestic production in the United States.
Visit the IPPE website HERE.
The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine GFMT
which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.
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