Given the scale of today’s supply chain, moving food and beverage products through the market is impossible without a vast over-the-road (OTR) transport system. Keeping the transport units responsible for shipping our food clean and sanitary is as key to maintaining food safety as anything that happens at a manufacturing and processing facility. To ensure public safety, the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) includes a Final Rule on Sanitary Transportation mandating cleanliness and sanitation standards for food transport units to protect products from contamination.
FSMA’s requirements differ from many other regulations by refraining from outlining specific procedures, instead opting for broader standards that manufacturers and other stakeholders must meet. As a result, stakeholders have created specific industry best practices to ensure that food transport units maintain these cleanliness and sanitation standards throughout the journey from farm to fork.
Food transportation safety best practices require adherence to different standards of inspection, cleaning methods, chemical usage, and more to ensure compliance with FSMA. Here’s what to keep in mind in each category:
Choosing wet or dry cleaning methods depends on the type of soil or contaminant being removed, as well as the type of food transportation unit being cleaned. For example, wet cleaning methods are required for the removal of microbial contaminants and allergens from food contact surfaces. Dry cleaning methods suffice for bulk containers carrying non-allergenic products. However, for refrigerated units with corrugated floors, wet cleaning is required to adequately remove accumulated dirt and contaminants from the container.
It’s critical to conduct a food-grade wash to remove all potential for cross-contamination and cross-contact between bulk loads, using steam, high-pressure water, or detergent mixtures:
The wash ticket a company uses to verify sanitation is only as good as the integrity of the wash station that issued it. Approving a wash station through standard supplier approval processes is critical to protecting the food and beverage products being transported.
Sanitizers are regulated by the EPA and mandate that workers follow label instructions exactly. In other words, the label is the law. Sanitation records must include the concentration of sanitizing agents used during cleaning to demonstrate that the label was followed.
The process of keeping food transportation units clean and sanitary is full of surprising challenges. Here’s what to do about the most common issues that crop up:
With so much potential for exposure to pathogens, maintaining food transportation safety is crucial to preventing foodborne illness outbreaks, avoiding recalls, and protecting the overall food supply chain. AIB International is a leading educator in food safety training, helping customers mitigate food safety risks throughout their supply chain. Learn more about vehicle cleanliness and sanitation in our Food Safety and Sanitation Online training’s Sanitary Transportation Module.