BRCGS Global Standards
The BRCGS Global Standards provide a framework to manage product safety, integrity, legality, quality, and the operational controls in the food, food ingredient, manufacturing, processing and packaging industries.
What is BRCGS and how do you get Certified?
JOURNEY TO BRCGS CERTIFICATION
LETS BEGIN!
Phase 2 – External Audits
Phase 3 – Achieve Certification
Phase 4 – Maintenance & Re-Certification
ESTABLISH AND IMPLEMENT
- Appoint an internal business champion
- Engage a consultant to Consultant Marketplace
- Purchase and subscribe to the Standard – go to Intertek Inform
- Perform a Gap Analysis in preparation for the establishment of the management system
- Upskill your team- Enroll into
BRCGS Food Safety – 3 Day Auditor Course Issue 9
- Evaluate your organisation against BRCGS requirements through Internal Audits
EXTERNAL AUDITS
Partner with an accredited certification body such as Intertek SAI Global
ACHIEVE CERTIFICATION
Complete the External Audit process to achieve BRCGS certification
MAINTENANCE & RE-CERTIFICATION
Conduct Regular Internal Reviews
Schedule Surveillance Audits
Level up your training for your internal Champion by enrolling them into
Internal Food Safety Auditor ISO22000:2018 & ISO19011:2018
Online Internal Food Safety Auditor ISO 22000:2018 & ISO 19011:2018
1 Unannouced Audit is required every three (3) years
Re-Certification Audits are required each year
Key Benefits
GFSI Recognition
Customer Assurance
Auditor Expertise
What is in the BRCGS Global Standard Food Safety?
Embedding Food Safety Culture.
An effective food safety management system requires a commitment by senior management from its inception, to implementation and beyond to optimise continuous improvement all of which is underpinned by a culture of food safety which must be leader-led.
The BRCGS Food Safety requires the development of an effective hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP) program based on the principles of the internationally recognised Codex Alimentarius system.
Ensure your company’s policies and procedures – which form the basis for the product and process controls necessary to produce safe products – meet customer expectations, and make sure staff are trained to continue a consistent production. These elements include, but are not limited to, product specifications, supplier approval, traceability, and the management of incidents, food fraud, food defence and product recalls.
The expectations for the building/construction, production environment, the layout and their maintenance, must be suitable to assure hygienic conditions throughout the food production and handling areas. These need to be supported by the pre-requisite programs such as cleaning, pest control, waste management and foreign body controls.
Product design and development processes assure that proper allergen management, safeguarding product and ingredient provenance, appropriate product packaging and effective/conclusive product inspection and testing.
The establishment and maintenance of safe process controls, weight/volume control and equipment calibration, and ensures the documented HACCP plan is put into practice.
This section of the Standard deals with products are at risk of pathogenic contamination. Additional controls are required for these products to ensure safety.
Organisations are required to ensure that all personnel performing work that affects product safety, legality and quality are demonstrably competent to carry out their activity, through training, personal hygiene standards and suitable site issued protective clothing.