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Original Articles

Food contact substances and chemicals of concern: a comparison of inventories

, &
Pages 1438-1450 | Received 10 Feb 2014, Accepted 02 Jun 2014, Published online: 07 Jul 2014
 

Abstract

Food contact materials (FCMs) are intended to be in contact with food during production, handling or storage. They are one possible source of food contamination, because chemicals may migrate from the material into the food. More than 6000 FCM substances appear on regulatory or non-regulatory lists. Some of these substances have been linked to chronic diseases, whilst many others lack (sufficient) toxicological evaluation. The aim of this study was the identification of known FCM substances that are also considered to be chemicals of concern (COCs). The investigation was based on the following three FCM lists: (1) the 2013 Pew Charitable Trusts database of direct and indirect food additives legally used in the United States (or Pew for short), (2) the current European Union-wide positive list for plastic FCMs (or Union for short), and (3) the 2011 non-plastics FCM substances database published by EFSA (or ESCO for short). These three lists of food contact substances (Pew, Union, ESCO lists) were compared with the Substitute It Now! (SIN) list 2.1, which includes chemicals fulfilling the criteria listed in article 57 of Regulation (EC) No. 1907/2006 (REACH), and the TEDX database on endocrine-disrupting chemicals. A total of 175 chemicals used in FCMs were identified as COCs. Fifty-four substances present on the SIN list 2.1 were also found on the Union and/or ESCO lists. Twenty-one of those 54 substances are candidates for Substances of Very High Concern (SVHC), and six of these 21 are listed on Annex XIV and intended for phase-out under REACH. In conclusion, COCs used in FCMs were identified and information about their applications, regulatory status and potential hazards was included.

Graphical Abstract

Acknowledgement

All authors are employees at the Food Packaging Forum Foundation, a charitable non-profit organisation. It is funded largely by donations from the packaging industry, but works independently of donors’ special interests. The employer does not restrict the study authors’ freedom to design, conduct, interpret and publish research results in any way.

Supplemental data

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19440049.2014.931600.

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