Packaging
Busting toxic chemicals in food-contact packaging Just when we thought that our neatly packaged food and drinks were safe from contaminants, it has now been made aware to us that the chemicals used in the making of packaging materials could also be a conduit to health risks, says Angelica Buan in this article. Meanwhile, two researchers in New Zealand have developed a sensor that could detect notorious phthalates.
C
hemicals have earned the notoriety of being, in many instances, toxic. It may be true for substances that require care and precision in handling. However, chemicals are useful components in materials that we practically use in our daily lives. This is more so in plastics packaging, where chemicals are part of the manufacturing process. The worst enemy of packaged food and drinks is contamination by not only organisms causing food spoilage, but also chemicals inherently used for producing packaging materials and to enhance functionality of materials. These can also potentially contaminate the products on contact, studies say. Health risks under the wraps Chemicals in materials used for packaging are found to influence the health of consumers in varying degrees. A study, published in the journal Food Additives and Contaminants, discovered that around 175 legally-used chemicals found in food packaging are linked to cancer, fertility, genital malformations and birth defects. The surprising news is that these chemical-containing food packaging complies with the criteria of Substances of Very High Concern (SVHC), set by the EU's Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) body. Chemical contamination in packaging can occur if it is in direct contact with food. There are instances also that chemical migration occurs for secondary and tertiary packaging, as well as during the production process.
18
JANUARY / FEBRUARY 2016
Early this year, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) scratched off three greaseresistant perflourinated chemicals used in food packaging materials. The Environmental Working Group (EWG), reacted to this stating that the ban undercuts a sound solution to the problem, adding “that there are yet a number of similar FDA-authorised chemicals used in packaging materials.”
“..the US FDA scratched off three grease-resistant chemicals used in food packaging materials…” Other meaningful actions, such as removing Bisphenol A (BPA), another industrial chemical used in the production of food-contact packaging that is linked to a host of health risks such as hormone disruption and cancer, has not alleviated safety concerns according to some reports. The latter point out that BPA substitutes such as Bisphenol F (BPF) and Bisphenol S (BPS) present different risks, one of which is the potential effect to brain development in infants, as cited in a research by the University of Calgary in 2015. As well, there are certain chemicals in packaging that can migrate into the packaged product. Yet, the debate weighs on how much of the chemicals that can be detected. A recently conducted second phase of the Australian Total Diet Study by the Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) spotted low levels of chemicals in food and beverage items that had leached from plastic packaging. FSANZ tested samples for about 30 chemicals that included BPA, epoxidised soy bean oil (ESBO), perfluorinated compounds and phthalates, as well as printing inks, for migration into food from packaging. The tests showed" no detections of phthalates, perfluorinated compounds, semicarbazide, acrylonitrile or vinyl chloride in food samples". What this means, said FSANZ, is that the amount of the chemicals migrating into the product may pose no safety concerns.