Food Irradiation
This page describes the importance and benefits of food irradiation.
On this page:
Overview
Food irradiation is a food safety technology that eliminates pathogens, including disease-causing germs, from foods. Like pasteurization of milk, and pressure cooking of canned foods, treating food with ionizing radiation kills bacteria and parasites that would otherwise cause food-borne diseases, a world-wide concern. For example, the food that NASA astronauts eat is sterilized by irradiation to avoid the possibility of food-borne illness in space.
Remember
Food irradiation does not make food radioactive.According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), studies clearly show that, when done correctly, food irradiation provides a number of benefits:
- reduces or eliminates disease-causing pathogens
- does not make food radioactive
- does not change the nutritional value of the food.
However, food irradiation does not eliminate all food dangers and does create some problems:
- It does not inactivate dangerous toxins which have already been produced by bacteria prior to irradiation. In some cases, such as C. botulism, it is the toxin produced by the bacteria, rather than the bacteria itself, which poses the health hazard.
- It does not prevent the aging of the fruit and vegetables that can lower their nutritional value, taste and flavors. Irradiating fruit and vegetables to extend their shelf life can make “old” food look “fresh”.
- Irradiation also unavoidably kills off bacteria that produce the smells that warn you when food is going "bad."
- Irradiated food does not meet the definition of organic.
Three different irradiation technologies exist, each using a different kind of ray: gamma rays (from cobalt-60 sources), electron beams, and x-rays. All three methods use the same concept to accomplish food irradiation. When ionizing radiation strikes bacteria and other microbes, its high energy breaks chemical bonds in molecules that are vital for cell growth and integrity. As a result, the microbes die, or can no longer multiply causing illness or spoilage.
Who is protecting you
U.S. Food and Drug Administration(FDA), Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN)
FDA approves food irradiation techniques for a number of foods including herbs and spices, fresh fruits and vegetables, wheat, flour, pork, poultry, and red meat. FDA requires that irradiated foods bear both a logo and a statement that the food has been irradiated.
U.S. Department of Agriculture USDA)
USDA supports FDA in promoting appropriate uses of food irradiation. USDA also sets, defines and regulates the use and meaning of "organic" on food labels (irradiated food does not meet the definition of “organic”).
What you can do to protect yourself
The safety of irradiated food has been well researched and documented to kill harmful bacteria and control food spoilage. Food irradiation does not make food radioactive. Be aware of the limits and negative effects of irradiation: it does not eliminate dangerous toxins that are already there; it masks the aging of fruits and vegetables, it kills bacteria that produce smells that warn us food is spoiling, and it disqualifies food from being labeled "organic."
Resources
Food Irradiation February 2012. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency You can learn more about food irradiation on this Web page. The page also describes the radioactive sources used in food irradiation. |
Food Irradiation - a better way to kill microbes associated with food borne illness February 2012. International Atomic Energy Agency On this Web page, you can read more about food irradiation. |
Food Irradiation: Questions and Answers February 2012. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention You can read answers to many questions about food irradiation on this page. |
FoodSafety.gov – Your Gateway to Federal Food Safety Information U.S. Department of Health and Human Services On this page, you can read about food safety and food irradiation. You also can link to federal and state food irradiation websites. |