Overview
ABSTRACT
Except in cases where wooden materials are used to improve organoleptic or microbiological characteristics of a food product, through deliberate exchanges between wood and food in direct contact, wood should comply with the inertness principle, like any other food-contact material. Wooden materials should thus neither alter organoleptic properties of food, nor release constituents that could adversely affect human health. After a brief presentation of European and French regulations, the scope and limits of their applications to wooden packaging materials in contact with foods are presented and discussed, together with how their chemical and microbiological inertness is evaluated.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Florence FRICOTEAUX: Senior Lecturer, ESIReims (École Nationale Supérieure d'Ingénieurs de Reims) – URCA (Université de Reims Champagne Ardennes) (Reims, France)
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Florence AVIAT: Doctor of Science, Founder and President YouR ResearcH – Bio-Scientific (Nantes, France)
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Nadia OULAHAL: Senior Lecturer (HDR), IUTLyon1, BioDyMIA (Bioengineering and Microbial Dynamics at Food Interfaces), Lyon 1 University (Bourg en Bresse, France) - Member of RMT Chlean Pass.
INTRODUCTION
Wood, an ancient material, is still used today as a packaging material and in the manufacture of objects intended to come into contact with food products.
In the agri-food sector, wood is used in the composition of objects designed for handling food products, such as cutting boards and kitchen utensils (cutlery, dishes, etc.).
It is used in the manufacture of "light" packaging, but more rarely in "heavy" packaging.
Lightweight packaging is :
crates used for fruit and vegetables;
seafood baskets (fish and seafood);
or cheese boxes.
Heavy packaging includes :
CASES ;
PALLOX;
pallets used to store and transport certain bulk fruits.
In all three cases, the wood is used for presentation, handling, storage or transport, and must not release substances likely to modify the contents (guaranteeing organoleptic and chemical inertness, and not being a vector for undesirable micro-organisms).
When used as a raw material in the manufacture of barrels for maturing wine, sheaves for sowing milk prior to cheese production, or maturing boards for certain cheeses, wood influences the organoleptic or microbiological characteristics of the final product, resulting from exchanges between the wood and the food product in contact.
With the exception of the wine industry, wood is subject to competition from plastic and cardboard packaging, due in particular to the very detailed and up-to-date regulations governing these two materials over the last thirty years. Indeed, the regulations governing wood in contact with food, and therefore its suitability for food contact, are poorly identified, hence the importance of taking stock of the food suitability of wood.
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KEYWORDS
packaging | regulation | Food packaging | food | wood | Healthcare | biocompatibility
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Food-safe wooden packaging
Bibliography
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Standards and norms
- Norme Internationale pour les Mesures Phytosanitaires N° 15 - NIMP 15 - 2003
- Cork stopper – Determination of releasable 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA). - ISO 20752 - 2007
- Microbiology of food and animal feeding stuffs – Horizontal methods for sampling techniques from surfaces using contact plates and swabs. Geneva, Switzerland. - ISO/FDIS 18593 - 2018
Regulations
REGULATION (EC) No 1935/2004 of October 27, 2004, relating to materials and articles intended to come into contact with foodstuffs and repealing Directives 80/590/EEC and 89/109/EEC
REGULATION (EC) No 2023/2006 of December 22, 2006, on good manufacturing practice for materials and articles intended to come into contact with foodstuffs
DECREE no. 2008-1469 of December 30, 2008...
Directory
Organizations – Federations – Associations (non-exhaustive list)
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SIEL – Syndicat national des Industries de l'Emballage Léger en Bois
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ADEME – French Environment and Energy Management Agency
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