Packaging plays a foundational role in protecting food from contamination, damage, and regulatory risk throughout the supply chain. In this digital seminar, the Safe Quality Food Institute (SQFI), alongside Eagle Certification Group and Graphic Packaging International, explores how effective packaging programs support food safety, regulatory compliance, and customer confidence. The session focuses heavily on the SQF Code for Packaging Manufacturing, emphasizing risk-based thinking, Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs), traceability, and audit readiness.
The Code is globally recognized and built on a risk-based approach, reinforcing accountability, supplier management, and preventive controls across packaging supply chains.
The SQF Quality Code and Business Value
In addition to food safety certification, the seminar explains the optional SQF Quality Code, which targets process consistency and product quality. This code helps organizations:
Certified sites may use the SQF Quality Shield, signaling a higher level of operational maturity to customers and stakeholders.
SQF and ISO 9001: Alignment and Integration
The presenters outline significant alignment between SQF and ISO 9001, particularly around:
This overlap allows organizations already certified to ISO standards to integrate SQF requirements more efficiently into existing management systems.
Steps to Achieving SQF Certification
The certification journey begins with understanding the SQF Code and using available guidance documents and training resources. Key steps include:
Reviewing applicable SQF modules
Selecting a certification body
Conducting internal audits annually
While gap assessments are optional, certification is typically issued within 55 days of the audit’s final day, provided corrective actions are completed.
Packaging Types and Key GMP Requirements
The seminar clarifies the three main packaging categories and their associated risks:
Critical GMP focus areas include cleaning and sanitation, employee hygiene, and proper storage and handling of hazardous chemicals.
Common SQF Non-Conformances in Packaging Audits
Traceability is identified as the number one major non-conformance in packaging audits, followed closely by weaknesses in internal audit programs. The presenters emphasize that non-conformances evolve with each new edition of the SQF Code, requiring continuous program review and improvement.
SQF Edition 10: What’s Changing
Looking ahead to SQF Edition 10, the seminar highlights planned updates such as:
These changes aim to improve consistency, clarity, and audit outcomes across the SQF program.
SQF and FSMA Regulatory Alignment
Although most packaging manufacturers are not required to register under FDA rules, the SQF Code closely aligns with FSMA expectations. Clauses addressing hazard analysis, preventive controls, supplier approval, traceability, and recall procedures mirror FSMA’s emphasis on risk-based food safety management and GMPs.
Real-World Implementation: Graphic Packaging International
Industry insights from Graphic Packaging International demonstrate how SQF certification supports regulatory compliance and customer requirements. Implementation typically involves refining existing systems rather than major operational changes, especially in newer facilities. Strong leadership commitment, adequate resources, and clear role separation between SQF practitioners and quality managers are identified as success factors.
Traceability, Recalls, and Risk Reduction
Robust traceability and recall programs are shown to dramatically reduce investigation time - from days to minutes, helping organizations avoid costly food safety incidents related to foreign materials or supplier failures.
Internal Audits and Audit Readiness
Internal audits are repeatedly emphasized as a cornerstone of SQF success. Effective programs function as “mini SQF audits,” covering all code elements rather than focusing solely on facility conditions. Data shared during the seminar shows that weak internal audits correlate strongly with lower external audit scores.
Auditor Expectations and Unannounced Audits
The session concludes with insight into auditor preparation and the unannounced audit process. Sites are required to complete an unannounced audit once every three years within a defined window, reinforcing the importance of year-round compliance rather than audit-day preparation.
Closing Takeaway
This seminar reinforces that packaging is not just a protective barrier but a critical food safety system. By aligning packaging operations with the SQF Code, strengthening internal audits, and maintaining robust traceability programs, organizations can reduce risk, meet regulatory and customer expectations, and build long-term food safety resilience.
Additional SQF Resources
For readers looking to deepen their understanding of SQF requirements and packaging compliance, the following SQF resources provide valuable guidance: