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In HACCP, the risk assessment step involves identifying potential hazards, assessing their likelihood and severity. This ensures systematic evaluation and management of risks associated with biological, chemical, physical, and allergenic hazards in the food production, handling, processing, and distribution.
Ensuring a thorough risk assessment protects you against costly recalls, preserves reputation integrity, and minimizes the likelihood of regulatory interventions. This process helps food businesses identify areas of concern and implement appropriate measures to mitigate risks and ensure compliance with food safety regulations and standards.
The WHO recommends that, to conduct a thorough risk assessment, both hazards and risks should be examined. Hazard and risk are terms that are often incorrectly used interchangeably, but they are in fact not the same.
A hazard is a biological, chemical or physical agent in food with the potential to cause an adverse health effect.
A risk is a function of likelihood of encountering this hazard by the severity it can cause depending on the situation.
This assessment is a complex process where in-depth expert knowledge is required.
In the food industry, there are different methods for conducting risk assessments to ensure food product safety and quality.
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points will focus on food safety management systems. It involves seven principles:
By applying HACCP principles, food producers can systematically evaluate and address risks associated with biological, chemical, allergenic, and physical hazards in food production.
Threat Assessment and Critical Control Points address intentional threats or acts of sabotage or terrorism. By integrating TACCP into risk assessment practices, food producers can safeguard against deliberate threats to food safety.
Vulnerability Assessment and Critical Control Points complement TACCP by focusing on the vulnerability of food supply chains to economically motivated adulteration (EMA) or food fraud. It aims to identify vulnerable points in the supply chain, enhance supplier control and verification processes, and implement measures to mitigate the risks of food fraud. By incorporating VACCP into risk assessment frameworks, food producers can enhance transparency, integrity, and trust in the food supply chain.
By following these steps, your organization can identify and mitigate potential risks to protect the health of your consumers and comprehensively assess risks and implement effective control measures to ensure the safety, quality, and integrity of your products.
Assuring your food safety management system includes all relevant hazards is a daily task that can be time-consuming. You need to stay informed regarding relevant or new hazards and limits in regulations to react quickly and implement the right process. In order to help you conduct thorough hazard identification and risk assessment steps, we can support you with useful tools.
An online platform monitoring and analyzing the regulatory framework in food and consumer goods in 73 countries.
This tool monitors legislation and regulations to provide up-to-date information on chemical and biological contaminant limits.
An online tool for an efficient international watch on safety and fraud alerts on products and raw materials from all over the world.
Our consultants are available to assist you in maintaining your food safety management system in response to changes such as new products and new raw materials, new machinery implementation, and process modifications. These changes may require further risk assessment, and the implementation of an appropriate control plan may be necessary.

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