HACCP AND THE ENVIRONMENT

Although HACCP was originally conceived to ensure food safety, there are other recognized benefits related to the use of the system, such as reduction in losses during food production. Better trained employees and monitored procedures are responsible for this benefit, because the systematic monitoring of some steps of the process leads to immediate responses when critical limits are exceeded, in a way that hazards are controlled without delay, preventing errors and losses during the process. Therefore, fewer failures in the process lead to fewer noncompliant products, that is, fewer products that are rejected and discarded. By the lack of strict control of the process, as proposed in the HACCP system, errors are only identified in the finished product, making reprocessing impossible most of the times, and leading to even greater losses.

Discard of finished product implies added costs for the company and for the environment, mostly related to the necessary treatment of the material before it is discarded, such as the use of energy, water, and chemical products, as well as the cost of the discard process per sector. For example, residual waters of food industries, such as dairy or meat plants contain blood, fat, meat residues, whey and amounts of milk, cheese, yogurt, dairy drinks, and butter. Treatment of these residues involves large amounts of water and produces large volumes of effluent that still have high concentrations of organic material and should be adequately treated before being disposed of into natural water bodies. Therefore, HACCP contributes to the reduction of losses in all steps of the process, and has a positive impact on environment conservation.




Many of the raw materials delivered to the food industry come directly from primary production (i.e., from farms), where the levels of contamination, mainly chemical contamination, may pose serious risks to the health of the consumer, especially in developing countries. Thus, this CCP requires critical limits for the presence of chemical contaminants, ensuring quality control of raw material, and leading to greater environmental awareness and responsibility of the suppliers, by means of controlled and rational use of pesticides and drugs of veterinary use. In this, HACCP contributes to enhance the responsibility of the industries in relation to food safety and quality, and environmental protection.

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