CertiTRACE
At the heart of the information system and management Halal supply chain
CertiTRACE system offers a complete solution for traceability (traceability products and processes) to operators of food chains. Its solution based on a series of complementary tools: a personalized monitoring on-line quality and food safety, physical features of automatic identification and marking lots and finally a centralized database, securely and shared among all operators a pathway for upward and downward traceability.
In its search for value or effectiveness, the company can not play alone in the power relations of the provider. Its effectiveness is dependent on the consistency of a production line taking into account the interdependencies between the different actors.
The requirement consists of four obligations on food business operators, namely:
- Have a system that allows them to identify the direct suppliers (n-1),
- Link-vendor product (which products from which suppliers)
- Link customer-product (which products were delivered to which customers) for clients' professional, understanding that food business operators do not have to identify customers when they are consumers,
- Implement a labeling or identification information that adapts to the operator wishes to transmit.
CertiTRACE system implemented is an upstream and downstream traceability based on a retrieval system.
What regulations?
- EC No. 178/2002: The new EU legislation based on the EC Regulation No 178/2002 and all relevant texts of appointed and hygiene package, confirmed this method as the cornerstone features of food safety . "The ability to trace through all stages of production, processing and distribution, pathway of a food, a feed, a food-producing animal or substance intended to be incorporated or may be incorporated in a foodstuff. "
- The decree of 8 June 2006 concerning a health approval of agribusinesses sets new rules for obtaining health marks for approval or agribusiness.
- Civil liability is derived from Article 1382 of the Civil Code: "Any act of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it." It is most often translated by a payment of damages to the victim.