There is growing public concern regarding contaminants in food. Such agents include pesticides, growth promoters, therapeutic drugs, endocrine disrupters, natural toxins and heavy metals. In a recent EU funded study 23,000 people were interviewed on their perceptions of the safety of food. More than 60% of people indicated that they were 'Very Concerned About the Safety of Food' with regard chemical contaminants. Though advances have been made in making the European food chain the safest in the world our consumers are not yet convinced. This has been recognised and the issue of the restoration of consumer confidence is a key part in the White Paper on Food Safety.
The need for scientific advances in food contaminant monitoring
Why are better methods required for monitoring chemical contaminants? It has been estimated that in the USA more than 250 million chemical analyses are performed each day 1 and more than 10% of these are of a poor standard and had to be repeated. These figures are supported by the European Commission2, which estimated that at least 5% of the Gross National Product activities of European Countries are devoted to measurement and millions of Euro are wasted each year by the need to repeat poor quality tests.
The scope of the analytical problem
The total number of crop protective ingredients produced worldwide each year is around a thousand. The array of licensed therapeutic drugs available numbers over 2000 and several hundred illegal preparations are believed to exist. Add to this the thousands of chemicals with endocrine disrupting activity plus the complexities of natural toxin formation then the true scope of the difficulties facing monitoring for chemical contaminants in food becomes apparent. Due to the testing procedures used monitoring of contaminants in food is very limited. Despite these limitations problems are frequently found but this leads to the question:
What is the real extent of the chemical contamination problems in food?
The European Commission Rapid Alert system gives a picture of the problems that exist with regard food contamination based on existing testing capabilities (Table 2.1). Many of these are chemical based alerts. The true picture is likely to be much worse and requires better methods of monitoring to aid prevention of contamination.
Table 2.1 shows EC Rapid Alerts Notification (2002). More than 60% are related to chemical issues.
Microbiological | 30% | |
Chemical | 30% | 61% chemical related |
Veterinary drug residues | 21% | |
Pesticide residues | 10% | |
Not determined | 4% | |
Foreign bodies | 3% | |
Others | 2% |
Specific objectives
The first outputs of BioCop will yield a range of novel screening tests for chemical contaminants. These will be heavily scrutinised by the analyte-based experts in the project team to ensure they are fit-for-purpose.
The main objectives of BioCop in addressing the problems are as follows:
Throughout the project the scientific community will be kept well informed about the progress of the research. This includes formation of strong links with other related EC food safety projects. Equally importantly consumers and decision-makers (regulatory and industrial) will be informed about how the project progress is helping achieve the mutual requirement of a healthier, safer food supply to the European consumer.
Summary
In summary, the BioCop project aims to solve the problems associated with the ability to monitor and prevent chemical contaminants in food products. The bio-analytical approaches proposed are highly innovative but truly realistic. The careful planning and management described in the following sections of the technical annex for the project will allow a flow of successful new techniques to be developed and implemented.