PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS Standards>13 ENVIRONMENT. HEALTH PROTECTION. SAFETY>13.110 Safety of machinery>BS EN ISO 21469:2006 Safety of machinery. Lubricants with incidental product contact. Hygiene requirements
Sponsored link
immediate downloadReleased: 2006-03-16
BS EN ISO 21469:2006 Safety of machinery. Lubricants with incidental product contact. Hygiene requirements

BS EN ISO 21469:2006

Safety of machinery. Lubricants with incidental product contact. Hygiene requirements

Format
Availability
Price and currency
English Secure PDF
Immediate download
191.18 EUR
You can read the standard for 1 hour. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 1 hour
19.12 EUR
You can read the standard for 24 hours. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 24 hours
57.35 EUR
English Hardcopy
In stock
191.18 EUR
Standard number:BS EN ISO 21469:2006
Pages:16
Released:2006-03-16
ISBN:0 580 47958 7
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS EN ISO 21469:2006


This standard BS EN ISO 21469:2006 Safety of machinery. Lubricants with incidental product contact. Hygiene requirements is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 67.020 Processes in the food industry
  • 13.110 Safety of machinery

This International Standard specifies hygiene requirements for the formulation, manufacture, use and handling of lubricants which, during manufacture and processing, can come into incidental contact (e.g. through heat transfer, load transmission, lubrication or the corrosion protection of machinery) with products and packaging used in the food, food-processing, cosmetics, pharmaceutical, tobacco or animal-feeding-stuffs industries. Included in this document are registration criteria that can be used to assess conformance with this International standard for lubricants with incidental product contact (see Annex B). It is not applicable to substances used as product additives or to those in direct product contact (see Annex A), but confines itself to hygiene without addressing occupational health and safety matters. Nevertheless, it is considered essential that where occupational health and safety is associated with the processes concerned it be considered along with hygiene so that measures satisfying the needs of both can be taken.