Product inspection of pet foods helps ensure consistent production of high quality, contaminant-free meals and treats for dogs, cats, and other household pets. Food safety and brand protection are as important for these food products as they are for every other member of the family.
There is a proliferation of pet food products on the market, from kibble and canned foods to freshly prepared meals, treats, and supplements that contribute to pets’ immune, digestive, and joint heath. Pet food manufacturers of all sizes need industrial checkweighers and foreign object detection technologies to help ensure brand protection and peace of mind.
Producers must use the right food safety inspection equipment for each type of pet food — dry, moist, liquid, etc., as well as the packaging type. Packaging innovations incorporate the same excitement as other consumer products: more sustainable, attention catching on the store shelf, or shipping capability through e-commerce channels. Additionally, producing pet food products at sufficient volume to meet consumer demand means ensuring high manufacturing throughput. Such inspection integrity requires a deep understanding of both inspection technologies and the regulations guiding inspection standards for pet consumption.
The same regulatory framework governing human food production applies to pet food and treats. However, governmental regulations, like those of the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA), generally are broad and cover a wide spectrum of risks and processing requirements. Retailers may set even higher standards through codes of practice required to do business with them, establishing a wider food safety framework through increased prescriptiveness. Retailer codes of practice typically are guided by the Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI).
Other plant environment concerns can include vibrations or sources of electromagnetic interference (EMI) that could impact inspection systems. In short, detection technology is a starting point, but a more holistic approach to the system is required for smooth integration into your specific factory environment that provides reliable, long-term operation.
It is a best practice when considering inspection technology types and models to have inspection equipment vendors conduct a sample test simulating the actual production environment (to the extent possible). Such testing generally comprises a customer shipping product to an equipment manufacturer’s test lab, where it is run through the proposed inspection system. A test report is then provided to the customer with application-specific information such as product handling details, contamination detection limit, check weighing accuracy, etc. This information will not only help determine if the proposed system is the most suitable choice for customer’s application, but also set more detailed expectation of the proposed system.
FAQs