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The Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety[1] makes the following Regulations in exercise of the powers conferred on it by Articles 15(2), 16(1) and (2), 25(1)(a) and (3), 32(2) and 47(2) of the Food Safety (Northern Ireland) Order 1991[2]. In accordance with section 47(3A) of the said Order it has taken into account relevant advice given by the Food Standards Agency. As required by Article 9 of Regulation (EC) No. 178/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down the general principles and requirements of food law, establishing the European Food Safety Authority and laying down procedures in matters of food safety[3]), there has been open and transparent public consultation during the preparation and evaluation of these Regulations. Citation and commencement 1. These Regulations may be cited as the Plastic Materials and Articles in Contact with Food (No 2) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 and come into operation on 19th November 2006. Interpretation 2. —(1) In these Regulations —
(2) For the purposes of these Regulations the supply otherwise than on sale, in the course of a business, of any material or article is deemed to be a sale. Restriction on the use, sale or import of plastic materials and articles 3. —(1) No person may —
(b) sell for the purpose of handling of food; or (c) import from anywhere other than an EEA State for the purpose of handling of food,
a plastic material or article which fails to meet the required standard.
(b) it does not meet the required standards set out in regulation 6, 7, 8, 9 or 10.
Restriction on the use of monomers in the manufacture of plastic materials and articles
(b) identified by PM/REF no, CAS no (if any) and name in columns 1, 2 and 3 respectively of Sections A or B of Annex II; and (c) used in accordance with any restrictions and specifications for that monomer set out or referred to in column 4 of those Sections.
(3) Paragraph (1) does not apply to the use of a monomer in the manufacture of any —
(b) epoxy resins; (c) adhesives and adhesion promoters; or (d) printing inks.
(4) Paragraph (1) shall not be taken to prohibit the manufacture of any plastic material or article with any substance if the substance in question is a mixture which falls within paragraph 3(c) (relating to mixtures of authorised substances) of Annex II and is of good technical quality.
(b) is an oligomer or a natural or synthetic macromolecular substance or a mixture thereof which falls within paragraph 3(b) of that Annex,
and is of good technical quality.
(ii) is not used in accordance with any restrictions and specifications for that additive set out in the corresponding entry in column 4 of Section A or B of that Annex or
(b) any food additive authorised by Directive 89/107 or any flavouring authorised by Directive 88/388 that migrates into food —
(ii) where the food is of a type for which the use of any such food additive or flavouring is so authorised, in quantities exceeding the limits provided for in Directive 89/107 or Directive 88/388 as appropriate, or in Annex III whichever is the lower.
(3) In any proceedings for an offence under these Regulations where it is alleged that the commission of the offence is due to the manufacture of a plastic material or article with any additive identified in Section A or B of Annex III which is not of good technical quality, it shall be a defence for the person accused to prove that each such additive is present in the finished plastic material or article as an impurity, a reaction intermediate or a decomposition product.
(b) one sixth of the number of milligrams expressed in column 4 per square decimetre of surface area of the plastic material or article if the plastic material or article comprises —
(ii) sheet, film or other plastic material or article which cannot be filled or for which it is impracticable to estimate the relationship between the surface area of the material or article in question and the quantity of food in contact with that surface area.
(2) A plastic material or article manufactured from any monomer for which a migration limit in mg/kg is expressed in column 4 of Section A or B of Annex II is not deemed to be capable of transferring constituents of that monomer to food with which the plastic material or article may come into contact in quantities exceeding the appropriate limit in paragraph (1) if the only food with which that plastic material or article may come into contact is food to which regulation 9(3) applies.
(b) one sixth of the number of milligrams expressed in column 4 per square decimetre of surface area of the plastic material or article if the plastic material or article comprises —
(ii) sheet, film or other plastic material or article which cannot be filled or for which it is impracticable to estimate the relationship between the surface area of the material or article in question and the quantity of food in contact with that surface area.
(2) A plastic material or article manufactured containing an additive for which a migration limit in mg/kg is expressed in column 4 is not deemed to be capable of transferring constituents of that additive to food with which the plastic material or article may come into contact in quantities exceeding the appropriate limit in paragraph (1) if the only food with which that plastic material or article may come into contact is food to which regulation 9(3) applies.
(b) identified by PM/REF No, CAS No and name in columns 1, 2 and 3 respectively of Annex IV and (c) in compliance with the restrictions and specifications set out in column 4 of that Annex.
Required standards relating to overall migration limits
(ii) an article which can be filled and for which it is impracticable to estimate the surface area in contact with food; or (iii) a cap, gasket, stopper or similar device for sealing
the appropriate limit is an overall migration limit of 60 milligrams of constituents released per kilogram of food.
(3) For the purposes of this regulation a plastic material or article is not deemed to fail to meet the required standard under paragraph (1) if the only food with which that material or article may come into contact is food —
(b) where there is no "X" placed anywhere in the group of columns headed "Simulants to be used" opposite that food.
(4) In any proceedings for an offence under these Regulations where it is alleged that a plastic material or article does not comply with this regulation, the defence available in paragraph 6(2) of Schedule 2 shall be available as specified in that paragraph.
(b) in any case where the extent to which vinyl chloride, as identified in Section A of Annex II, is capable of such transfer falls to be established, by the method referred to in regulation 7(2) of the 2005 Regulations.
(2) In Schedules 2 and 3 references to migration or release of a substance are to be construed as references to the transfer of constituents to the simulant representing the food or, as the case may be, food with which it may come into contact.
(b) provides, in respect of substances that are subject to a restriction on quantities migrating into food, information obtained from experimental data or theoretical calculation concerning —
(ii) where appropriate, purity criteria in accordance with the purity Directives.
(2) In establishing which descriptions of food a material or article may come into contact with, it is to be assumed until the contrary is proved that, for the purposes of these Regulations, if particulars are shown in relation to that material or article in accordance with paragraph (1)(a), those particulars are accurate and that unless the particulars so indicate, there are no restrictions on the intended conditions of contact.
(b) paragraphs (2) to (5) are subject to Article 1(3) (exception relating to certain storage containers and pipelines); (c) for the purpose of Article 6(4) the competent authority is the authority identified in regulation 14.
(2) Subject to Article 6(1), (2) (transitional provisions) and (4) (labelling requirements), no person may —
(b) use for the handling of food in the course of a business, (c) sell for the purpose of the handling of food, or (d) import for the purpose of the handling of food
any material or article in contravention of Article 3 or Article 4 (prohibitions relating to BFDGE and NOGE respectively).
(b) sell for the purpose of the handling of food, or (c) import for the purpose of the handling of food
any material or article that has been manufactured in such a way as to contravene the requirements of Article 2. Enforcement 14. Each district council shall execute and enforce —
(b) these Regulations.
Offences and Penalties
(b) intentionally obstructs any person acting in the execution of Regulation 1895/2005 or these Regulations; (c) contravenes regulation 13(6) or 17(3) or, without reasonable excuse, otherwise fails to give to any person acting in the execution of Regulation 1895/2005 or these Regulations any assistance or information which that person may reasonably require; or (d) in purported compliance with any requirement mentioned in sub-paragraph (c), knowingly or recklessly supplies information that is false or misleading in any material particular,
is guilty of an offence.
(ii) on summary conviction to a term of imprisonment not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum or both;
(b) in the case of any other offence under these Regulations to a term of imprisonment not exceeding three months or to a fine not exceeding level five on the standard scale or both.
(3) Nothing in paragraph (1)(c) is to be construed as requiring any person to answer any question or give any information if to do so might incriminate him.
(b) import it into the United Kingdom,
shall be taken to have established the defence provided by paragraph (1) if he satisfies the requirements of paragraphs (3) and (4).
(b) that either —
(ii) it was reasonable in all the circumstances for him to rely on checks carried out by the person who supplied him with the plastic material or article or the material or article in question; and
(c) that he did not know and had no reason to suspect at the time the offence was committed that his act or omission would amount to an offence under these Regulations.
(4) A person satisfies the requirements of this paragraph of the offence is one of sale and he proves —
(b) that the sale of which the alleged offence consisted was not a sale under his name or mark; and (c) that he did not know and could not reasonably have been expected to know at the time the offence was committed that his act or omission would amount to an offence under these Regulations.
(5) If in any case the defence provided by this regulation involves the allegation that the commission of the offence was due to the act or default of another person, or to reliance on information supplied by another person, the person accused shall not without leave of the court be entitled to rely on that defence unless —
(b) where he has previously appeared before the court in connection with the alleged offence, within one month of his first such appearance,
he has served on the prosecutor a written notice giving such information identifying or assisting in the identification of that other person as was then in his possession.
(ii) processed cereal-based foods or baby foods for infants and young children as defined by Commission Directive 96/5/EC[21], and
(b) the lid of which is sealed by means of a PVC gasket containing epoxydised soybean oil having PM/Ref No. 88640 in Section A of Annex III,
it shall be a defence to prove the matters set out in paragraph (2).
(b) the glass jar was filled and sealed before 19th November 2006; (c) the date of filling or a coded indication of that date was present on the jar or its lid at the time of sale; and (d) the labelling or marking with the particulars mentioned in sub-paragraph (c) at the time of sale complied with the requirements relating to durability in Article 2.1(a) of Directive 2000/13/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council[23].
(3) No person shall without reasonable excuse fail to comply with a request made by the enforcement authority to disclose the date signified by the coded indication mentioned in paragraph (2)(c).
(b) manufactured or imported into the European Community before 1st January 2003, the defence in regulation 10(13) of the 1998 Regulations; (c) put into free circulation in the European Community before 30th November 2002, the defence in regulation 10(14) of the 1998 Regulations; (d) manufactured or imported into the European Community before 1st March 2004, the defence in regulation 10(19)(a) of the 1998 Regulations as in operation on the 28th February 2003; (e) manufactured or imported into the European Community before 1st March 2003, the defence in regulation 10(19)(b) of the 1998 Regulations as in operation on 28th February 2003; (f) containing azodicarbonamide and brought into contact with food before 2nd August 2005, the defence in regulation 10(23) of the 1998 Regulations; or (g) manufactured or imported into the European Community before 1st March 2006, the defence in regulation 10(25) of the 1998 Regulations,
shall apply in relation to offences under these Regulations in like manner as it applied to offences under the equivalent provisions in those Regulations.
(b) that the matter constituting the alleged offence would not otherwise have constituted an offence under these Regulations if the amendments to the Directive made by Commission Directive 2005/79/EC had not been implemented in Northern Ireland at the time the matter occurred.
Procedure where a sample is to be analysed
(b) mark each part or container; (c) as soon as reasonably practicable, give one part to the owner and notify him in writing that the sample will be analysed; (d) submit one part for analysis in accordance with Article 30 of the Order; and (e) retain one part for future submission under regulation 20.
Secondary analysis by the Chief Agricultural Analyst
(b) the prosecution intends to adduce as evidence the result of the analysis mentioned above,
paragraphs (2) to (7) shall apply.
(b) shall if requested by the prosecutor (if a person other than the authorised officer); (c) shall if the court so orders; or (d) shall (subject to paragraph (5)) if requested by the defendant,
send the retained part of the sample to the Chief Agricultural Analyst for analysis. Applications for inclusion of an additive in the Community list of authorised additives 21. —(1) This regulation applies where a person wishes to make an application for the inclusion of an eligible additive in the Community list referred to in Article 4 of the Directive. (2) The application mentioned in paragraph (1), including supporting data, must be made to EFSA before 1st January 2007. (3) If during examination of the data referred to in paragraph (2), EFSA calls for supplementary information, the eligible additive may, if otherwise permitted to be used under the law of Northern Ireland continue to be so used until EFSA has issued an opinion, provided the supplementary opinion is submitted within the time limits specified by EFSA. (4) For the purposes of this regulation, an eligible additive is one whose use is permitted in one or more Member States before 1st January 2007. Application of provisions of the Order 22. —(1) The following provisions of the Order shall apply for the purposes of these Regulations as they apply for the purposes of the Order —
(b) Article 30(8) (relating to documentary evidence);
Amendment of the Food Safety (Sampling and Qualifications) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1991
(3) In regulation 8 —
(b) for paragraph (4) substitute the following paragraph —
(4) In regulation 9 —
(b) in sub-paragraph (b) of paragraph (3), for the expression "that Part as read with Part 2 of that Schedule." substitute "those Sections as read with the general introduction to that Annex.";
in paragraph (5), for the expression "Schedules 5 and 6" substitute "Schedules 2 and 3".
1. In Sections A and B of Annexes II and III (for the purposes of this Schedule referred to together as "the Annexes")—
(b) the CAS number of any substance is its CAS (Chemical Abstracts Service) Registry Number; (c) the name of any substance is its chemical name, and to the extent that there is any inconsistency between the CAS number and the name, the name shall take precedence over the CAS number; and (d) references to specific migration are to be taken to mean specific migration as measured in accordance with Schedules 2 and 3
2.
If a substance appearing in the Annexes as an individual compound also falls within a generic term which appears therein, any restriction applying to that substance shall be that indicated for the individual compound and the entry applying to the generic term shall be treated as varied to such extent as is necessary.
(b) natural or synthetic macromolecular substances used in the manufacture of modified macromolecules, if the monomers required to synthesise them are not so identified; and (c) substances used to modify existing natural or synthetic macromolecular substances.
(2) Salts (including double salts and acid salts) of aluminium, ammonium, calcium, iron, magnesium, potassium and sodium of authorised acids, phenols or alcohols are not included in the lists in the Annexes even if they are authorised and intentionally used; however names containing "…acid(s), salts" do appear in the lists if the corresponding free acid(s) is or are not mentioned.
(b) substances referred to in note 38 of Annex VI.
4.
In the case of substances listed in Section B of Annex III, the specific migration limits specified in column 4 shall have effect where the verification of compliance is carried out in Simulant D or in test media of substitute tests as prescribed in Directive 82/711/EEC and 85/572/EEC. General Provisions 1. When the results of the migration tests specified in this Schedule and, where appropriate Schedule 3, are analytically determined, the specific gravity of any simulants used shall be assumed to be 1, so that milligrams of any substance released per litre of simulant will correspond numerically to milligrams of that substance released per kilogram of that simulant. 2. Where any migration test specified in this Schedule and, where appropriate, Schedule 3 is carried out on any sample taken from any plastic material or article and the quantities of food or simulant placed in contact with the sample differ from those employed in the actual conditions under which the plastic material or article is used or is to be used, the results obtained should be corrected by applying the formula M = (( m.a2/a1.q).1000) where —
(b) m is the mass in the mg of substance released by the sample as determined by the migration test; (c) a1 is the surface area in square decimetres of the sample in contact with the food or simulant during the migration test; (d) a2 is the surface area in square decimetres of the plastic material or article in actual conditions of use; and (e) q is the quantity in grams of food in contact with the plastic material or article in actual conditions of use.
3.
—(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2), any testing of migration from any plastic material or article shall be carried out on that plastic material or article.
(b) if rectified olive oil or any of its substitutes had been used as a simulant and—
(ii) the simulant absorbed by the sample had been extracted and determined quantitatively; (iii) the quantity of simulant so found had been subtracted from the weight of the sample measured after contact with the simulant; and (iv) the difference between the initial and corrected final weights had been determined to represent the overall migration of the sample examined,
(2) Three identical samples of the plastic material or article are to be procured, following which—
(b) the second and third samples are to be subjected to the same conditions of temperature but the period of contact is to be respectively two and three times that specified and the overall migration determined in each case (M2 and M3).
(3) Where a modified test has been carried out in accordance with sub-paragraph (2), provided that either M1 or M3 – M2 did not exceed the overall migration limit, the plastic material or article subjected to the test shall be deemed to be in compliance with that limit.
(b) 12mg/kg or, as the case may be, 2 milligrams per square decimetre in migration tests using other simulants referred to in Schedule3.
1. Subject to paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of this Part, migration tests for the determination of specific and overall migration shall be carried out using the food simulants specified in Parts 2, 3 and, where appropriate 4, and under conventional migration test conditions as specified in Part 5. 2. Subject to paragraphs 3 and 4 of this Part, substitute tests which use test media under the conventional substitute test conditions as specified in Part 6 shall be carried out if the migration test using the fatty food simulants specified in Part 3 is not feasible for technical reasons connected with the method of analysis. 3. Subject to paragraph 4 of this Part, alternative tests as specified in Part 7 may be used instead of the migration test with fatty food simulants specified in Part 3 but the results of such alternative tests may not be used to determine compliance with a migration limit unless the conditions specified in Part 7 are fulfilled. 4. In migration testing it is permissible to—
(b) omit the migration, the substitute or the alternative tests where —
(ii) the conditions for non-compulsory testing set out in Article 8.2 or 8.3 of the Directive are met.
5. Subject to Parts 3, 4, 5 and 7, the simulants to be used in migration testing are specified in the Table to this paragraph (referred to in this Part as "the Table").
6. For the purposes of this Schedule a reference to an abbreviation in column 1 of the Table means a reference to the simulant in column 1 of that Table opposite that abbreviation. 7. The characteristics of rectified olive oil referred to in the Table are —
(b) Refractive index at 25°C = 1.4665 to 1.4679; (c) Acidity (expressed as % of oleic acid) = 0.5% maximum; and (d) Peroxide number (expressed as oxygen milli-equivalents per kg of oil) = 10 maximum
8.
The fatty food simulants referred to in the Table are —
(b) sunflower oil, the characteristics of which are —
(ii) Refractive index at 20°C = 1.474 to 1.476; (iii) Saponification number = 188 to 193; (iv) Relative density at 20°C = 0.918 to 0.925; and (v) Unsaponifiable matter = 0.5% to 1.5% .
(c) a synthetic mixture of triglycerides the composition of which is as set out in the following tables:
Purity
Typical absorption spectrum (thickness of layer: d = 1 cm; Reference: water at 35°C)
9.
Where fatty food simulant specified in paragraph 4 is used in migration testing and the result of that test shows that a plastic material or article does not comply with any migration limit specified in regulation 9 or the Annexes, verification that the plastic material or article does not comply with the specified migration shall be carried out by testing that material or article using olive oil if such testing is technically feasible, and if such testing is not technically feasible the plastic material or article shall be deemed not to comply with the specified migration limit. Testing, reduction factors and definition of food types 10. The testing of plastic materials and articles shall be carried out under the test conditions specified in Part 5 using a simulant or simulants selected in accordance with this Part and taking a new test specimen of the plastic material or article for each simulant used. 11. —(1) Where a test is carried out on a plastic material or article intended to come into contact with more than one food or group of foods and a reduction factor is specified for one or more of those foods or groups of foods which is not equivalent to the reduction factor specified for one or more of the other foods or groups of foods with which the plastic material or article is intended to come into contact—
(b) the plastic material or article shall be treated as being capable of transferring its constituents to food with which it may come into contact in excess of a migration limit specified in regulation 9 or the Annexes if, following application of those specified reduction factors, one or more of the results show that the material or article does not comply with that specified migration limit.
(2) For the purpose of this paragraph —
(b) a reduction factor is specified for a food or group of foods where, in the Table to Part 4 —
(ii) "X" is placed in a column headed by a specified simulant opposite that food or group of foods followed by an oblique stroke and a reduction factor;
(c) a reduction factor shall be applied to a test result by dividing the result by that reduction factor.
12.
Food types are defined in Table 1 below as follows —
Selection of simulants for testing materials and articles intended for contact with all food types 13. The simulants to be used in testing a plastic material or article which is intended for contact with all food types are simulant B, simulant C and simulant D which, at the test conditions specified in Part 5, are considered to be more severe. Selection of simulants for testing materials and articles which are already in contact with a known food 14. The simulant or simulants to be used in testing a plastic material or article which is already in contact with a known food shall be —
(ii) for the purposes of that Part, a simulant is, or simulants are, specified in relation to that specific food or specific group of foods,
(ii) within a specific group of foods described in the Table to Part 4 of this Schedule,
15. The simulant or simulants to be used in testing a plastic material or article which, pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 1935/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council on materials and articles intended to come into contact with food[28] ("Regulation 1935/2004"), is accompanied by a specific indication stating any type or types of food described in Table 1 with which it may or may not be used shall be the simulant or simulants in column 2 of Table 2 opposite the contact food in column 1 of that Table which corresponds most closely to the type or types of food with which it may be used, as identified by the indication which accompanies the plastic material or article. 16. The simulant or simulants to be used in testing a plastic material or article which, pursuant to Regulation 1935/2004, is accompanied by a specific indication, expressed in accordance with paragraph 8, stating any food or group of foods described in the Table to Part 4 with which it may or may not be used shall be—
(b) where the indication states that the plastic material or article should not be used with any food or group of foods described in column 2 of Table to Part 4, a simulant other than the simulant or simulants which, for the purposes of Part 4, is or are specified in relation to that food or group of foods.
17.
A specific indication referred to in paragraph 7 is expressed in accordance with this paragraph if it is expressed—
(b) at the retail stage, by using an indication which refers to only a few foods or groups of foods described in the Table to Part 4. Table 2: Simulants to be selected for testing food contact materials in special cases
18. For the purposes of this Schedule a simulant is specified in relation to a specific food or a specific group of foods where "X" is placed in the column headed by that simulant opposite that specific food or specific group of foods in the Table to this Part, and the Table shall be read in conjunction with the notes to it and with paragraphs 2 to 5. 19. For the purposes of this Part —
(b) a reduction factor is specified in relation to a specific food or group of foods where, in the Table —
(ii) "X" is placed in a column headed by a specified simulant opposite that food or group of foods allowed by an oblique stroke and a reduction factor.
20.
Where a reduction factor is specified in the Table in relation to a specific food or a specific group of foods, that reduction factor shall be applied to the result of any migration test using the simulant specified in relation to that food or group of foods by dividing the result of the test by the reduction factor.
(b) if the pH value of the foodstuff is 4.5 or less, simulant B shall be used.
22.
Where a food is listed in the Table under both a specific and a general heading, the simulant relating to the specific heading is the simulant which falls to be used for the migration test.
(¹) Simulant B shall not be used where the pH is more than 4.5. (²) his test shall be carried out in the case of liquids or beverages of an alcoholic strength exceeding 10% vol with aqueous solutions of ethanol of a similar strength. (³) If it can be demonstrated under regulation 12 or proved by means of an appropriate test that there is to be no fatty contact with the plastic material or article, simulant D shall not be used. General criteria 1. Subject to paragraphs 2, 4, 6 and 7 below and to paragraph 4.4 of Chapter II of the Annex to Directive 82/711, when carrying out migration tests the time and temperature used shall be the time and temperature selected from column 2 of the Table to this Part which correspond to the worst foreseeable conditions of contact specified in column 1 of that Table for the plastic material or article being tested and to any labelling information on maximum temperature for use. 2. Where the plastic material or article being tested is intended for a food contact application covered by a combination of two or more times and temperatures specified in column 2 of the Table to this Part, the migration test shall be carried out by subjecting the test specimen successively to all the applicable worst foreseeable conditions appropriate to the sample, using the same portion of food simulant. 3. For the purposes of this Part the worst foreseeable conditions of contact are those which are recognised to be the most severe on the basis of scientific evidence. Volatile migrants 4. When carrying out a test of the specific migration of volatile substances any test using a simulant shall be performed in a manner that recognises the loss of volatile migrants which may occur in the worst foreseeable conditions of use. Special cases 5. When carrying out a migration test of a plastic material or article that is intended for use in a microwave oven, if the appropriate time and temperature is selected from the table to this Part, either a conventional oven or a microwave oven may be used. 6. Where the carrying out of a migration test under contact conditions specified in the Table to this Part causes any physical or other change in the test specimen that does not occur under the worst foreseeable conditions of use of the plastic material or article being tested, the migration test shall be carried out in the worst foreseeable conditions of use in which such physical or other change does not occur. 7. Where, in actual use, the plastic material or article being tested is intended to be used for periods of less than 15 minutes at any temperature of not less than 70°C and not more than 100°C and such use is indicated by appropriate labelling or instructions, no test other than for 2 hours at 70°C shall be carried out on the plastic material or article unless the plastic material or article is also intended to be used for storage at room temperature, in which case no test other than for 10 days test at 40°C shall be carried out. 8. The Table to this Part shall be read with the notes to it.
(¹) The period of time which represents the worst foreseeable conditions of contact. (²) This temperature shall be used only for simulant D. For simulant A, B or C the test may be replaced by a test at 100°C or at reflux temperature for a duration of four times the time selected in accordance with paragraph 1 of this Part. 1. Subject to paragraphs 2, 4 and 5, all the test media specified in the Table to this Part shall be used in the substitute fat test for overall or specific migration under the test conditions corresponding to the test conditions for simulant D. 2. Test conditions other than those specified in the Table to this Part may be used in the substitute fat test if the assumptions underlying the test conditions specified in that Table and, where the plastic material or article being tested is a polymer, the existing experience of that type of polymer are taken into account. 3. For each test—
(b) the rules prescribed for simulant D in Parts 3, 4 and 5 of this Schedule shall be applied for each test medium; (c) subject to paragraph 4, compliance with a migration limit shall be determined by selecting the highest value using all the test methods.
4.
Where carrying out a migration test causes any physical or other change in the test specimen which does not occur under the worst foreseeable conditions of use of the plastic material or article the result of that test shall not be used to ascertain compliance with a migration limit.
(¹) MPPO = Modified polyphenylene oxide (²) The volatile test media are used up to a maximum temperature of 60°C. A precondition of using these tests is that the material or article will withstand the test conditions that would otherwise be used with simulant D. Immerse a test specimen in olive oil under the appropriate conditions. If the physical properties are changed (eg melting, deformation) then the material is considered unsuitable for use at that temperature. If the physical properties are not changed then proceed with the substitute tests using new specimens. 1. Subject to paragraph 2 of this Part the conditions which must be fulfilled to allow the result of either test specified in paragraph 3 to be used as an alternative to the result of a migration test carried out under Part 3 are that—
(b) the migration occurring in either test specified in paragraph 3 does not, after application of the appropriate reduction factor, exceed the appropriate migration limit.
2.
The condition in sub-paragraph (a) of paragraph 1 does not have to be fulfilled if it can be shown on the basis of the result of scientific experiment that the values obtained in either of the tests specified in paragraph 3 are equal to or greater than those obtained in any of the migration tests specified in Part 3.
(b) other tests using media having a very strong extraction power under very severe test conditions where, on the basis of scientific evidence, it is generally recognised that the results using these tests are equal to or higher than those obtained in a test using simulant D.
(This note is not part of the Regulations) 1. These Regulations revoke the Plastic Materials and Articles in Contact with Food Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 ("the No.1 Regulations"), and re-enact those Regulations with certain changes. The main changes are —
(b) provision for a transitional defence relating to the sale of jars of foods for infants and young children sealed with PVC gaskets containing epoxidised soybean oil; and (c) the replacement of most of the content of Schedules 1 to 4 of the No. 1 Regulations by the incorporation, by reference to Annexes of Commission Directive 2002/72/EC as amended, of the specifications and lists of authorised substances formerly contained in those Schedules.
2.
The Regulations in Part 2 —
(b) prohibit the use of monomers and additives in the manufacture of plastic materials and articles other than in accordance with specified conditions (regulation 4 and Schedule 1 in the case of monomers and regulation 5 and Schedule 1 in the case of additives); (c) specify the required standards relating to the capability of a monomer or an additive to confer its constituents to food (regulation 6 for monomers and regulation 7 for additives); (d) specify the required standard for products obtained by bacterial fermentation (regulation 8); (e) specify the required standard relating to overall migration limits from plastic materials or articles to food (regulation 9); (f) specify the required standards relating to the migration of primary aromatic amines from plastic materials or articles to food (regulation 10); (g) specify the methods for determining the capability of a plastic material or article to transfer its constituents to food, and for detecting the presence of any such constituents in food (regulation 11 and Schedules 2 & 3); (h) provide that prior to the retail stage plastic materials and articles must be accompanied by certain specified written information, including a declaration of legislative compliance (regulation 12); (i) provide for the execution and enforcement of Regulation 1895/2005 on the restriction of use of certain epoxy derivatives in materials and articles intended to come into contact with food (OJ No. L302, 19.11.2005, p.28), which contains Community provisions relating to the epoxy derivatives known as BADGE, BFDGE and NOGE (regulation 13).
3.
The Regulations in Part 3 —
(b) specify the offences that may be committed under these Regulations and set out the maximum penalties on conviction (regulation 15); (c) provide for defences of a general nature, such as exercise of due diligence etc, to offences under regulation 15 (regulation 16); (d) provide a defence relating to the sale of glass jars that contain certain foods for infants and young children and that have been sealed with a PVC gasket containing epoxidised soybean oil (regulation 17); (e) provide for transitional defences in relation to certain plastic materials or articles that have already been manufactured or put into circulation in advance of a change in the law that would otherwise have made their manufacture or circulation unlawful (regulation 18); (f) specify the procedure to be followed when sending a sample for analysis (regulation 19); (g) make provision for a reference sample to be analysed by the Laboratory for the Chief Agricultural Analyst (regulation 20).
4.
Part 4 of the Regulations contains provisions relating to the procedure to be followed and the time limit to be observed where a person wishes to apply to the European Food Safety Authority for the authorisation of a new additive (regulation 21).
(b) Council Directive 85/572/EEC laying down the list of simulants to be used for testing migration of constituents of plastic materials and articles intended to come into contact with foodstuffs (OJ No. L372, 31.12.1985, p.14); (c) Commission Directive 2002/72/EC (OJ No. L220, 15.8.2002, p.18) relating to plastic materials and articles intended to come into contact with foodstuffs, as amended by Commission Directives 2004/1/EC (OJ No. L7, 13.1.2004, p.45), 2004/19/EC (OJ No. L71, 10.3.2004, p.8) and 2005/79/EC (OJ No. L302, 19.11.2005, p.35).
Notes: [1] Formerly the Department of Health and Social Services see S.I. 1999/283 (N.I.1) Article 3(6)back [2] S.I. 1991/762 (N.I.7) as amended by S.I. 1996/1663 (N.I.12), paragraphs 26 to 42 of Schedule 5 and Schedule 6 to the Food Standards Act 1999 c.28 and S.R.2004 Nos. 482 and 505back [3] OJ No. L31, 1.2.2002, p.1. That Regulation was last amended by Regulation (EC) No. 1642/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council (OJ No. L245, 29.9.2003, p.4)back [4] OJ No. L297, 23.10.1982, p.26back [5] OJ No. L222, 12.8.1997, p.10back [6] OJ No. L372, 31.12.1985, p.14back [7] OJ No. L184, 15.7.1988, p.61back [8] OJ No. L40, 11.2.1989, p. 27back [9] OJ No. L220, 15.8.2002, p.18back [10] OJ No. L7, 13.1.2004, p.45back [11] OJ No. L71, 10.3.2004, p.8back [12] OJ No. L302, 19.11.2005, p.35back [13] S.R. 1998 No. 264, as amended by S.R. 2000 No. 402, S.R. 2002 No.316, S.R. 2003 No.2, S.R. 2004 No.493 and S.R. 2005 N0.49. It was revoked by S.R. 2006 No. 251back [14] S.R.2005 No.210 as amended by S.R. 2006 No. 251back [15] OJ No. L178, 28.7.97, p.1, as last amended by Commission Directive 2004/46, OJ No. L114, 21.4.2004, p.15back [16] OJ No. L226, 22.9.95, p.1, as last amended by Commission Directive 2004/47, OJ No. L113, 20.4.2004, p.24back [17] OJ No. L339, 30.12.96, p.1, as last amended by Commission Directive 2003/95, OJ No. L283, 31.10.2003, p.71back [18] OJ No. L302, 19.11.2005, p.28back [19] Regulation (EC) No 1935/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council on materials and articles intended to come into contact with food and repealing Directives 80/590/EEC and 89/109/EEC (OJ No. L338, 13.11.2004, p.4)back [20] OJ No. L175, 4.7.1991, p.35, as last amended by Directive 2003/14/EC (OJ No. L41, 14.2.2003, p.37)back [21] OJ No. L49, 28.2.1996, p.17, as last amended by Directive 2003/13/EC (OJ No. L41, 14.2.2003, p.33)back [23] OJ No. L109, 6.5.2000, p.29, as last amended by Directive 2003/89/EC (OJ No. L308, 25.11.2003, p.15)back [25] OJ No. L220, 15.8.2002, p.18. This Directive has been previously amended by Commission Directives 2004/1/EC (OJ No. L7, 13.1.2004, p.45) and 2004/19/EC (OJ No. L71, 10.3.2004, p.8)back [26] OJ No. L302, 19.11.2005, p.35)back [28] OJ No. L338, 13.11.2004, p.4back
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