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							Shelf-Life of Pre-packaged Food Products

                  An Industry Perspective




                            Dr. Ahmet Anbarci

                 Scientific & Regulatory Affairs
                    Kraft Foods CEEMA Region

    Dubai International Food Safety Conference
                          24-26 February, 2009
Agenda



     •   Kraft Foods in short
     •   Shelf-life – Definition, Dimensions
     •   Shelf-life  Kraft Foods RD&Q functions
     •   Establishing and Managing Shelf-life
     •   Testing, Principles, Parameters
     •   Selected Aspects, Examples
     •   Discussion




           DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   2
Kraft Foods Overview, 2008




         DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   3
  Kraft Foods Overview, 2008



   Worldwide headquarters in Northfield, Illinois, U.S.

            Sales in more than 155 Countries

                  Operations in 70 Countries

 With approximately 100,000 employees, more than 180
        manufacturing and processing facilities

11 global or geographic Research and Development Centers
                    around the world




             DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   4
One of Best Brand Portfolios in
Food & Beverage Industry

        9 Brands over $1 billion annual revenue
              50+ Brands over $100 million
             40+ Brands over 100 years old




           DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   5
Eastern Europe, Middle East & Africa
Region


                                                                                   Fast Facts
                                                  Region headquarters: Vienna, Austria

                                                                    Key markets in the region:
                              Bulgaria, Egypt, Romania, Russia, South Africa,
                         Turkey, Ukraine and the Gulf Cooperation Council, as
                                   well as other Middle East & Africa Markets

                                                                        Some key region brands:
                              Kraft cheeses; Tang powdered beverages; Alpen
                           Gold, Karuna, Korona and Milka chocolates; Estrella
                          and Cipso salted snacks; Rasco biscuits; Carte Noire,
                             Jacobs, Maxwell House and Nova Brasilia coffees.




          DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   6
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia:
- Production Facility – Biscuits
                                               Kraft Foods in GCC
  - Employees: 138 (23% Saudi)
                                                       Kingdom of Bahrain:
  - Brands: Oreo, Ritz and Belvita
                                                       - Production Facility - (Tang and Cheese)
                                                       - Employees:           287 (17% Bahraini)
                                                       - Brands: Tang, Kraft Cheese




                                                United Arab Emirates:
                                                - MEA Regional Office
                                                - Employees:         130
                                                - Lead Brands Marketed in GCC:




                  DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   7
Shelf-life, definition, dimensions


Shelf-Life is the time between manufacture and possible latest
consumption, wherein the characteristics of a food product are considered
to remain acceptable with following dimensions and aspects:

            products must be safe
                  - self-speaking, un-debated, un-compromised; HACCP
       ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            quality must remain acceptable
                 - consumer accepted quality; vital to gain consumers and
                   maintain their loyalty
            nutritional value needs to be maintained
                 - prime aspect for food; maintain claims on products
            commercial stability to be assured
                 - package integrity, look; key for customers and at point of sale




                  DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   8
Packaged food over shelf-life




          DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   9
Shelf-life  Food Research, Development & Quality
(Kraft Foods RD&Q)

Kraft Foods RD&Q is the owner of shelf-life and has the responsibility, expertise
and the infrastructure for establishing products’ shelf-life.


        Category                                 Geographic                                        Functional
        Expertise                 +               Proximity                       +                Excellence




 • Coffee                                    • Banbury, UK                                 • Quality and Safety
 • Refreshment Beverages                     • Tarrytown, NY                               • Scientific Affairs
 • Grocery                                   • East Hanover, NJ                            • Regulatory
 • Biscuits and Cakes                        • Munich, Germany                             • Nutrition
 • Confectionery                             • Glenview, IL                                • Research
 • Savory Snacks                             • Madison, WI                                 • Chemistry
 • Cheese/Dairy                              • Battle Creek, MI                            • Microbiology
 • Convenient Meals                          • Melbourne, Australia                        • Sensory / Consumer Insight
                                             • Curitiba, Brazil                            • Packaging
                                                                                           • Intellectual Property/ Patents




                        DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   10
Our RD&Q centre in Munich has the geographic responsibility for
West, Central, East Europe, Middle East and Africa


 Global                                                                                    Geographic / Local
  Glenview, IL                                                                            Madison, Battle Creek,
  East Hanover, NJ                                                                        Melbourne, Curitiba and 50
  Tarrytown, NY                                                                           other smaller centers
  Banbury, UK
  Munich, Germany




 Functions in Munich
  Product Dev
  Process Dev
  Packaging
  Microbiology &
    Food Safety
  Quality
  Chemistry
  Sensory                                             Munich – Geographic Scope
  Regulatory                                            West, Central, East Europe, Middle East and Africa
  Scientific Affairs
  Nutrition                                           Munich – Product Role
                                                         Cheese/Dairy, Convenient Meals, Refreshment
                                                         Beverages, Grocery, Chocolate Confectionery, Savory
                                                         Snacks, (Quality & Safety for Coffee)


                        DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   11
Same principles around the Globe

Kraft Product Safety & Quality Assurance Guiding Principles

• Product Safety/Public Health is our uncompromised priority.
• Food Safety is pre competitive.
• Food Safety is based on sound science and correct risk assessment.
• HACCP and our ISO based QCMS (Quality Chain Management
  System) are central to our business process.
• Kraft applies common Food Safety & Quality Standards globally.


In addition we believe in:
• a systems and process driven approach
• a strong upstream focus with major supplier collaboration
• covering each and every component in the business Value Chain.


               DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   12
Quality Chain Management System

Shelf-life evaluation and management is an essential part of successful food
quality management. Ideally, shelf-life is an integral part of an overall Quality
Management System through the entire value chain.

 • Kraft Foods worldwide approach to the systematic management of product Safety and Quality is
   called the Quality Chain Management System (QCMS).

 • QCMS is a complete embodiment of the ISO 9001 quality system model enhanced to include the
   product Safety and Quality requirements of Kraft Foods worldwide food businesses.

 • QCMS defines the requirements throughout the process of design, procurement, manufacture,
   distribution and customer/consumer product usage and relations.



    Kraft Foods’ procedure on “shelf-life evaluation” is a fundamental part of QCMS and has to be
     applied by all relevant employees around the world.

     Objective: “All Kraft Food businesses shall have a process in place for establishing and
     managing the shelf-life of all products.”
     Scope: “Shelf-life evaluation applies globally to all KF businesses and categories. Key
     elements are parameters, procedures, storage conditions, shelf-life management and
     modification of shelf-life.”




                      DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   13
Food Value Chain




         DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   14
Shelf-life, definition, dimensions

Shelf-Life is the time between manufacture and possible latest
consumption, wherein the characteristics of a food product are
considered to remain acceptable with following dimensions and
aspects:

            products must be safe
                  - self-speaking, un-debated, un-compromised; HACCP
       ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       -
            quality must remain acceptable
                 - consumer defined quality; vital to gain consumers and
                   maintain their loyalty
            nutritional value needs to be maintained
                 - prime aspect for food; maintain claims on products
            commercial stability to be assured
                 - package integrity, look; key for customers and at point of sale




                 DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   15
  RD&Q functions involved

RD&Q is responsible for the “design” and establishing shelf-life; Category
Product Development Groups lead, relevant RD&Q functions as listed below
support the process. Other parties along value chain consulted as required,
e.g. Manufacturing.
   products must be safe                                 quality must remain acceptable

         -   Quality /Safety                                            -   Quality /Safety
         -   Chemistry                                                  -   Regulatory
         -   Microbiology                                               -   Chemistry
         -   Toxicology                                                 -   Microbiology
         -   Packaging                                                  -   Sensory / Consumer Insight
                                                                        -   Packaging

   nutritional value to be maintained  commercial stability to be assured

         -   Scientific Affairs                                         - Quality /Safety
         -   Regulatory                                                 - Regulatory
         -   Nutrition                                                  - Packaging
         -   Chemistry
         -   Packaging


                     DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   16
Testing


Shelf-life testing is a vital part of new product development.
Existing products are re-evaluated, if an extension of shelf-life is
targeted or any changes are considered. Re-evaluation may also
be triggered by consumer complaints or quality issues.


 Close to reality conditions pursued                              Testing protocols

 -   Full shelf-life testing and beyond                            -   Sampling
 -   Representative samples                                        -   Testing conditions
 -   Representative storage conditions                             -   Testing period
 -   Consumer relevant sensory testing                             -   Schedule, intervals
 -   Consumer research, if required                                -   Attributes, parameters
                                                                   -   Methods
                                                                   -   Record keeping




                 DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   17
Testing – parameters, questions to be
considered
      Product Safety and Robustness are uncompromised and checked
      and verified for the intended use and foreseeable misuse of
      products.
                     risk of pathogens ?
                     risk of toxins ?
                     allergens ?

      Shelf-Life beyond safety: Many parameters and a high number of
      possible combinations for industrially packaged food lead to a
      wide range of possible shelf-life’s.
                     product category, type, nature ?
                     micro-stability, risk of spoilage ?
                     chemical reactions ?
                     physical changes ?
                     organoleptic, sensory, consumer ?
                     packaging integrity and protection ?
                     transport and storage conditions ?
                     consumer behaviour, usage ?

             DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   18
Shelf-life – Regulated limits?




    Considering the complexity inherent to
    shelf-life, i.e. many parameters, their
    interaction, possible combinations (vs. the
    time we have in this forum), only some
    selected aspects/examples will follow.




           DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   19
Aspects/Examples: Basics for micro risks

                              STATIONARY


           LOG                                                 DEATH
    LAG


              Microbiological Growth

    Time of LAG phase determines maximum shelf life
    possible.
    LAG phase can vary depending on other
    parameters and can be extended by improved
    sanitation, processing, storage conditions,
    preservatives, modified atmosphere or some
    emerging technology.

           DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   20
Aspects/Examples: Consumer Relevant
Shelf-life Testing


Key elements:

 1. Representative Sampling
    - Final testing with plant products only (pilot products only for pre-assessment)
    - Freezing samples (= freezing the time)
    - If products cannot be frozen, multiple lots testing (assess impact of lots’ variability)


 2. Representative Storage Conditions
    - All along the Value Chain (transport, warehouses, consumer households)
    - Close to reality simulation (consider varying conditions, best / worst case scenarios)

 3. Test plan/methods relevant to product, market, potential consumers alienation
    - Internal sensory testing (people without project involvement, descriptive)
    - Quantitative descriptive analysis (trained panel)
    - Consumer acceptance testing (consumer liking, judgemental)




                   DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   21
Shelf-life of food products

Internal Sensory Testing


• At least three of the same participants at each tasting, involving people
  without project background.


• Focus should be descriptive, not judgement. After documenting the
  descriptive differences, judgement about the expected seriosity of deviations
  may be necessary.


• Representative control product needs to be used as a reference.


• Project leaders organize the taste sessions, sample storage and ensure right
  participants at each session. Consumer Sensory group provides the test
  procedure and analysis forms.


• Project leaders own next steps as agreed by team


                 DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   22
Shelf-life of food products


Quantitative Descriptive Analysis (QDA)


• A tool to test in an objective manner, whether sensory changes are perceivable.


• Generally recommended, when significant changes are expected / predicted over
  shelf-life.


• In case of changes that are not necessarily negative: Perceivability and relevance
  of changes need to be tested with consumers, to determine effects on consumer
  acceptability.


• Key acceptance drivers are known from earlier consumer tests can be used to
  judge the differences observed in QDA and the shelf life.




                 DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   23
Shelf-life, Consumer testing


Consumer Acceptance Testing


• For key products, and for critical cases, consumer acceptance testing is
  recommended.


• Multiproduct Central Location Test of samples at different stages in shelf life, before,
  at, and after end of shelf life at stake.


• Absolute safety of samples to be ensured via thorough micro testing.


• Test should be run with target consumers in the target countries. Participants need
  to be unaware of the test background.




                   DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   24
Aspects/Examples: Cheese and many
parameters
Same category, different types, processing, storage conditions, packaging, …
   => Shelf-life’s in a range of few to 18 months.

    12 months




                                                                                   18 months




                DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   25
Aspects/Examples: Packaging materials


Substrate                                                  OTR                    WVTR                Light Barrier   Strength
                                                           (cc/m2/24hrs)          (g/m2/24hrs)


Foil                                                       0                      0                   100%            Low
Aluminum laminate                                          <1                     <1                  100%            Medium
Polyester (PET)                                            90                     40                  <5%             Medium
Metallised PET (met-PET)                                   0.5                    <1                  >95%            Medium

PVdC coated PET                                            6                      14                  <5%             Medium
Biaxially Oriented Polyprop.                               1900                   6                   <5%             Medium
PVdC Coated BOPP                                           10                     5                   <5%             Medium
Metallised BOPP (met-BOPP)                                 100                    1.5                 >95%            Medium
Biaxially Oriented Nylon (OPA)                             45                     260                 <5%             Medium

PVdC Coated OPA                                            6                      7                   <5%             Medium
Glass Jar                                                  0                      0                   <5%             High
PP Rigid                                                   <1-200                 <1-100              <5%             High
Tetrapak/Combibloc                                         0                      0                   100%            Medium
3 Piece Metal Can                                          0                      0                   100%            High




                                 DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -     26
Aspects/Examples: Packaging with the
right protection
                                                                                High protection and other
                                                                                factors help to achieve a long
                                                                                shelf-life:

                                                                    Glass            Processed Cheese in a
                                                                    Jar              glass jar with a proven
                                                          Metal                      shelf-life of 12 months.
                                                          can
                                          PET
                                          container
                                     Composite
                                     can
                       Plastic
                       container
              Aluminium
              laminate
  Metalised
  laminate




                  DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   27
Shelf-life: Regulated limits?


Considering the complexity of shelf-life, limits set for shelf-life of packaged foods would
either be overcomplicated (wide array, needs regular updating) or a weak compromise,
most likely at category minimum. Risks and disadvantages for all appear to outweigh
any advantages.


    Consumers and all stakeholders along the value chain benefit from safe and high-quality
    products with tested and proven shelf-life. While the added safety, quality and value
    through regulated shelf-life limits is open to discussion, some risks and disadvantages are
    certain for industrial, packaged food:


         - Avoidable costs, economic penalty, if the limits set are too conservative, ,
           i.e. at the category minimum (lowest common denominator)
         - Risk of low quality products to consumers, if the limits set are too broad
         - Risk of missing new aspects, development or scientific progress
         - Low incentive, low motivation for industry to innovate or apply the “new”




                     DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   28
Shelf-life: Regulated limits?


 Conclusions:
 The food industry should perform due-diligence to judge, test and
 establish the shelf-life for each single product they manufacture,
 regardless how strict or wide the limits set by regulations may be.

 Food companies in general have to have their products’ data and
 expertise and to know about the nature, details and limits of their
 products.

 Shelf-life limits set for packaged food are open to abuse and do not
 appear to add value, safety or quality of especially packaged food.

 Shelf-life limits may be an unnecessary hurdle, especially for long tested
 products with a good record in country of origin or in other markets.




                DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   29
Shelf-life of food products




                          Thank you!




           DIFSC, Dubai, 24 – 26 February, 2009 / Dr Ahmet Anbarci   -   30

						
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