Agenda
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Coffee and registration
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Welcome
Chemical Watch
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Chair:
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U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) regulation of food contact materials
- Introduction to the FDA’s Food Additive Program:
Who we are
What we regulate
How we regulate - Recent Accomplishments of the program
- Current Challenges faced by the program
- Introduction to the FDA’s Food Additive Program:
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Post market concerns and non-intentionally added substances (NIAS)
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Food Contact Materials: Packaging compliance issues; an industry case study
- The role of packaging in food applications
- The impact that regulatory and consumer perceptions have on packaging suppliers
- Approaches that suppliers will be required to take in order to navigate this dynamic landscape
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Q&A
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Refreshments
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Brand-owner perspectives on compliance issues
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The impacts of U.S. states’ race to regulate single-use plastics (SUPs)
- Defining the legislative trends to date
- Challenges and opportunities derived from SUPs regulations
- Business impacts and consumer trends
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Food contact regulatory compliance of colorants concentrate
- The role of colorants concentrate in Packaging
- Food contact colorants concentration regulations
- Compliance of colorants concentrate in end use articles
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Q&A
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Lunch
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The Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) Regulatory Considerations and Labeling Concerns
Jeff CanavanDeputy Director, Labeling and Program Delivery Staff, Office of Policy and Program Development (OPPD), Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) -
Food Contact Notifications in USA - Practical Advice
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Practical Considerations for Food Contact Materials Not Directly Contacting Food (Non-DFC Inks)
- FCM are Regulated to ensure the consumer safety and acceptance of the packaged food.
- Each supplier of a FCM must interpret the practical significance of the regulations.
- Inks printed onto the surface of a food packaging article (or label), are designed to not directly contact food.
- Effective control of potential food contaminants from Non-DFC inks, require areas of regulations are identified which are not applicable.
- Practical consideration is applied to critical controls of inks which are important to providing a safe food packaging article.
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Q&A
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Refreshments
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California Proposition 65: upcoming changes and implications for the food contact industry
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The Environmental Protection Agency’s Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) approach to dietary exposure assessments
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State-level developments
- An overview of the Safer Consumer Products product prioritization process for the 2018-2020 Priority Product Work Plan
- An update on SCP’s evaluation of the food packaging product category.
Karl PalmerChief, Safer Consumer Products Branch, California Department of Toxic Substances Control -
Q&A
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End of Day 1/Cocktail reception