Food packaging


Food packaging is packaging for food. A package provides protection, tampering resistance, and special physical, chemical, or biological needs. It may bear a nutrition facts label and other information about food being offered for sale.

History

Packaging of food products have seen a vast transformation in technology usage and application from the stone age to the industrial revolution
7000 BC: The adoption of pottery and glass which saw industrialization around 1500 BC
1800: Nicolas Appert in response to extending shelf life of food for the French Army employed the use of glass bottles in thermal food treatment which was later replaced by metal cans
1870: The use of paper board was launched and corrugated materials patented
1880s: First cereal packaged in a folding box by Quaker Oats
1890s: Crown cap for glass bottles was patented by William Painter
1940s: Aerosol was first used by the marines during the world war II in pesticides application
1960s: Development of the two-piece drawn and wall-ironed metal cans in the USA, the ring- pull opener and the Tetra Brik Aseptic carton package
1970s: 1970 Bar code system was introduced in the retail and manufacturing industry. PET plastic blow-mold bottle technology widely used in the beverage industry was introduced
1990s: The application of digital printing on food packages became widely adopted
Plastic packaging saw its inaugural use during the world war II even though materials employed in its manufacturing such as cellulose nitrate, styrene and vinyl chloride were discovered in the 1800s

Functions

Packaging and package labeling have several objectives
The above materials are fashioned into different types of food packages and containers such as:
Packaging Type--
Aseptic processingPrimaryLiquid whole eggs or dairy products
TraysPrimaryPortion of fish or meat
BagsPrimaryPotato chips, apples, rice
BoxesSecondaryCorrugated box of primary packages: box of cereal cartons, frozen pizzas
CansPrimaryCan of tomato soup
Cartons, coated paperPrimaryCarton of eggs, milk or juice cartons
Flexible packagingPrimaryBagged salad
PalletsTertiaryA series of boxes on a single pallet used to transport from the manufacturing plant to a distribution center
WrappersTertiaryUsed to wrap the boxes on the pallet for transport

Primary packaging is the main package that holds the food that is being processed. Secondary packaging combines the primary packages into one box being made. Tertiary packaging combines all of the secondary packages into one pallet.

Gallery

Packaging machines

A choice of packaging machinery requires consideration of technical capabilities, labor requirements, worker safety, maintainability, serviceability, reliability, ability to integrate into the packaging line, capital cost, floorspace, flexibility, energy usage, quality of outgoing packages, qualifications, throughput, efficiency, productivity, and ergonomics, at a minimum.
Packaging machines may be of the following general types:
Reduced packaging and sustainable packaging are becoming more frequent. The motivations can be government regulations, consumer pressure, retailer pressure, and cost control. Reduced packaging often saves packaging costs.
In the UK, a Local Government Association survey produced by the British Market Research Bureau compared a range of outlets to buy 29 common food items and found that small local retailers and market traders "produced less packaging and more that could be recycled than the larger supermarkets."

Recycling of food packaging

After use, organic matter that is still in the food packaging needs to be separated from the packaging. This may also require rinsing of the food packaging.
Food packaging is created through the use of a wide variety of plastics and metals, papers, and glass materials. Recycling these products differs from the act of literally reusing them in the manner that the recycling process has its own algorithm which includes collecting, sourcing, processing, manufacturing and marketing these products. According to the Environmental Protection Agency of the United States the recycling rate has been steadily on the rise with data reporting that in 2005 40% of the food packaging and containers that were created were recycled and not just thrown away.

Trends in food packaging

It is critical to maintain food safety during processing
, packaging, storage, logistics, sale, and use. Conformance to applicable regulations is mandatory. Some are country specific such as the US Food and Drug Administration and the US Department of Agriculture; others are regional such as the European Food Safety Authority. Certification programs such as the Global Food Safety Initiative are sometimes used. Food packaging considerations may include: use of hazard analysis and critical control points, verification and validation protocols, Good manufacturing practices, use of an effective quality management system, track and trace systems, and requirements for label content. Special food contact materials are used when the package is in direct contact with the food product. Depending on the packaging operation and the food, packaging machinery often needs specified daily wash-down and cleaning procedures.
Health risks of materials and chemicals used in food packaging need to be carefully controlled. Carcinogens, toxic chemicals, mutagens etc. need to be eliminated from food contact and potential migration into foods. Besides these, the consumers need to be aware of certain chemical products that are packaged exactly like food products to attract them. Most of them have pictures of fruits and the containers also resemble food packages. However, they can get consumed by kids or careless adults which can lead to poisoning.

Manufacturing

Packaging lines may have a variety of equipment types: integration of automated systems can be a challenge. All aspects of food production, including packaging, are tightly controlled and have regulatory requirements. Uniformity, cleanliness and other requirements are needed to maintain Good Manufacturing Practices.
Product safety management is vital. A complete Quality Management System must be in place. Hazard analysis and critical control points is one methodology which has been proven useful. Verification and validation involves collecting documentary evidence of all aspects of compliance. Quality assurance extends beyond the packaging operations through distribution and cold chain management.