FINAT helps label printers understand new EU regulations

The Indian packaging and printing industry is currently enjoying the status of the blue-eyed kid among its counterparts. A further scrutiny divulges that the industry also has a large share of the food packaging jobs with Europe as the biggest target market. In a recent article issued to the media by FINAT, the worldwide association for manufacturers of self-adhesive labels and related products and services, the organisation explains the nitty-gritty of the recent changes in the EU10/2011 regula

12 Oct 2013 | By PrintWeek India

The report states that the new regulation on plastic materials and articles intended to come into contact with food came into legal force on 1 January 2013. “It replaces Commission Directive 2002/72/EC and national legislation based on that directive. Its purpose is to support brand owners’ and retailers’ duty of care to their customers, and represents an important additional measure in ongoing endeavours to ensure the quality and safety of food. Label printers who supply to the EU food industry have a key role to play,” the report reads.  

The writer, Jay Betton, business segment manager, food and retail labelling, UPM Raflatac EMEA, in the articles explains, “The new regulation applies the same principles as EC No 1935/2004 for materials and articles intended to come into contact with food. Such materials are required to be sufficiently inert to not transfer their constituents to food in quantities large enough to endanger human health, and to prevent unwanted changes to the composition of the food and how it looks, tastes or smells,”

“While EC No 1935/2004 applies to food packaging in general, the new EU 10/2011 specifically concerns all plastic materials and articles intended to come into contact with foodstuff, with labels considered an integral part of such packaging. EU10/2011 consolidates 2002/72/EC and seven amendments (these were previous regulations for plastics).The idea of the regulation is to harmonise the different legislation that has existed previously within individual member states. This should make it easier for different countries to deal with each other in terms of the shipping of goods,” he adds.

In his report, he points out that both direct food contact labels furnished with a plastic layer, as well as plastic labels applied to food packaging,  now require Declarations of Conformity (DoCs) stating which controlled but authorised substances are present in their make-up. All authorised substances – both restricted and unrestricted -- which may be used in packaging containing plastic in its layers are stipulated on the ‘Union List’ within EU 10/2011. Only restricted substances need to be declared; and as DoCs move downstream within the supply/manufacturing chain, such substances must be clearly identified and documented so that compliance can be optimally tested.

“Only when the packaging material or any layer provides a functional barrier that prevents migration of substances from behind that barrier into food, are labels and other packaging components exempt from EU 10/2011. Material compositions that are purely combinations of paper and board continue to be covered by national legislation or recommendations such as those of the German BfR,” he writes.

Need to be proactive

Betton also talks about various risks that label printers should be wary of. “Food label printers supplying into the EU need DoCs both from their labelstock and ink suppliers to be able to compile their own DoCs, which must, of course, also incorporate conformance information about any curing processes used during label production,” he says.

“It should be noted that the enactment of these regulations means that printers unable to supply DoCs cannot now be accepted as part of the end user’s supply chain, and may also leave themselves open to the financial repercussions of a product recall. It is therefore essential for label printers to be proactive in obtaining and supplying the necessary documentation if they are to retain their place as responsible and viable links in the broader professional packaging chain,” he concludes.