Contamination pathways for mineral oils into food packaging include print colours which predominantly enter the recycling circuit via newspapers and advertising brochures. The mineral oil mixtures evaporate and from the packaging pass into the foodstuffs. The health risk assessment of mineral oils found in foodstuffs is difficult, since no data exists on the toxicity of the detected substances once they have been absorbed from foodstuffs. The mineral oil concerned is a complex mixture of mineral oil saturated hydrocarbons (MOSH) and mineral oil aromatic hydrocarbons (MOAH), some of which can have carcinogenic and mutagenic properties.
Until now only one analytical method for detecting mineral oils in foodstuffs was available. This required a very special analysis technology and could not be applied by food inspection laboratories. The national reference laboratory for "substances intended for coming into contact with foodstuffs" of the BfR has now presented a new method during the symposium which takes into account the technical abilities of official food inspection facilities. This method was developed by the BfR in cooperation with the Laboratory of the Canton of Zurich. It is based on gas chromatographic analysis of the minerals following manual column chromatographic pre-separation. To assist interested laboratories in setting up the analysis procedure, a method development kit has been devised.
In order to stop contamination of foodstuffs through mineral oil mixtures from recycled packaging, technological solutions can be used that incorporate barrier coatings such as interior lining bags or coatings on the inside of packaging made of already used plastics. In the view of the BfR, these constitute a sustainable solution which, most importantly, allows short-term implementation. In addition, this approach enables exclusion of the possibility that other substances harmful to health make their way into foodstuffs from the recycled packaging. The presented experimental data on the different barrier solutions show that the contamination of foodstuffs through mineral oil mixtures has been dramatically reduced.
With the symposium, the BfR has created a forum through which participants were able to obtain information on the current state of information on the subject. Various representatives - for example from the print, paper and chemical industry as well as independent research institutes - suggested technological solutions for reducing mineral oil contamination of recycled paper fibre and to minimise mineral oil contamination of foodstuffs. Similarly, various representatives of interest groups made clear their position with regard to the various solution approaches.
The event was a follow-up to the 9th BfR forum on Consumer Protection 2010 which for the first time made the issue the subject of discussion.
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