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Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 laying down specific hygiene rules for food of animal origin
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Version Superseded: 14/11/2007
Point in time view as at 01/01/2007.
There are currently no known outstanding effects by UK legislation for Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council, SECTION XV: COLLAGEN.
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Food business operators manufacturing collagen must ensure compliance with the requirements of this section.
For the purpose of this section, ‘tanning’ means the hardening of hides, using vegetable tanning agents, chromium salts or other substances such as aluminium salts, ferric salts, silicic salts, aldehydes and quinones, or other synthetic hardening agents.
For the production of collagen intended for use in food, the following raw materials may be used:
hides and skins of farmed ruminant animals;
pig skins and bones;
poultry skin and bones;
tendons;
wild game hides and skins;
and
fish skin and bones.
The use of hides and skins is prohibited if they have undergone any tanning process, regardless of whether this process was completed.
Raw materials listed in point 1(a) to (d) must derive from animals which have been slaughtered in a slaughterhouse and whose carcases have been found fit for human consumption following ante-and post-mortem inspection or, in the case of hides and skins from wild game, found fit for human consumption.
Raw materials must come from establishments registered or approved pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 852/2004 or in accordance with this Regulation.
Collection centres and tanneries may also supply raw material for the production of collagen intended for human consumption if the competent authority specifically authorises them for this purpose and they fulfil the following requirements.
They must have storage rooms with hard floors and smooth walls that are easy to clean and disinfect and, where appropriate, provided with refrigeration facilities.
The storage rooms must be kept in a satisfactory state of cleanliness and repair, so that they do not constitute a source of contamination for the raw materials.
If raw material not in conformity with this chapter is stored and/or processed in these premises, it must be segregated from raw material in conformity with this chapter throughout the period of receipt, storage, processing and dispatch.
In place of the identification mark provided for in Annex II, Section I, a document indicating the establishment of origin and containing the information set out in the Appendix to this Annex must accompany raw materials during transport, when delivered to a collection centre or tannery and when delivered to the collagen-processing establishment.
Raw materials must be transported and stored chilled or frozen unless they are processed within 24 hours after their departure. However, degreased and dried bones or ossein, salted, dried and limed hides, and hides and skins treated with alkali or acid may be transported and stored at ambient temperature.
[X1Collagen must be produced by a process that ensures that the raw material is subjected to a treatment involving washing, pH adjustment using acid or alkali followed by one or more rinses, filtration and extrusion or by an approved equivalent process. The extrusion step may be not carried out when manufacturing low molecular collagen from raw materials of non-ruminant origin.]
After having been subjected to the process referred to in point 1, collagen may undergo a drying process.
If a food business operator manufacturing collagen complies with the requirements applying to collagen intended for human consumption in respect of all the collagen that it produces, it may produce and store collagen not intended for human consumption in the same establishment.
Editorial Information
Food business operators must ensure that collagen complies with the residue limits set out in the following table.
Residue | Limit |
---|---|
As | 1 ppm |
Pb | 5 ppm |
Cd | 0,5 ppm |
Hg | 0,15 ppm |
Cr | 10 ppm |
Cu | 30 ppm |
Zn | 50 ppm |
SO2 (Reith Williams) | 50 ppm |
H2O2 (European Pharmacopoeia 1986 (V2O2)) | 10 ppm |
Wrapping and packaging containing collagen must bear the words ‘collagen fit for human consumption’ and indicate the date of preparation.
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