ISO 22000:2018
- By : Admin
- 15 October 18, 14:22
ISO 22000:2018 – Food
safety management systems – Requirements for any organization in the food chain
was published to help confront the heap of problems present with the food
chain. It revises and supersedes the 2005 edition of the same standard, as well
as its technical corrigendum from 2006. Like its predecessor, ISO 22000:2018
specifies the general guidelines for a food management safety system (FSMS).
This type of system can enable an organization either directly or indirectly involved in the food chain to plan, implement, operate, maintain, and update a FSMS providing safe products and services. In assuring the organization’s conformance to its stated food policy, this international standard helps in evaluating and assessing mutually agreed customer safety requirements and demonstrating conformity with customers and any other interested parties.
Adherence to the guidelines laid out in ISO 22000:2018 can help organizations demonstrate compliance with applicable statutory and regulatory food safety requirements. It can also better position organizations towards seeking certification or registration of its FSMS by an external organization. Similarly, it is useful in making a self-assessment or self-declaration of conformity. One of the primary changes made to this revision is the adoption of ISO’s shared High-Level Structure (HLS). Over the past several years, HLS has become the common framework for management system standards, and its inclusion makes it easier for organizations to integrate more than one system into their processes at a single time, enhancing compliance, safety, and efficiency. For example, ISO 22000:2018 users can easily be entirely compliant with ISO 9001:2015. In addition, much like other ISO management system standards,
Therefore, managing risk is crucial to food business. As such, a major change to ISO 22000:2018 is its new approach to risk, in that risk is now distinguished between the operational level and the strategic level. At the strategic level of the management system (business risk), organizations can embrace opportunities in order to reach a business’s specific goals. At the operational level, users can use the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) approach. ISO 22000:2018 also clarifies the distinction between two Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycles included in the international document. The initial cycle applies to the management system as a whole, while the second PDCA cycle addresses the operations found in Clause 8, simultaneously covering the principles of HACCP defined by the Codex Alimentarius.