Thank you for Subscribing to Food Business Review Weekly Brief
Food Business Review | Tuesday, January 13, 2026
Fremont, CA: Food safety is a critical global public health concern that requires continuous innovation and strict regulatory oversight to ensure a secure food supply chain. One advanced method for preserving food is food irradiation, recognized as an effective technology for reducing pathogens and extending the shelf life of various products.
How Does Food Irradiation Enhance Safety, Shelf Life, and Global Trade Compliance?
Food irradiation involves exposing food products to controlled ionizing radiation—gamma rays from Cobalt-60 or Cesium-137, X-rays, or electron beams. This form of “cold pasteurization” disrupts the DNA of microorganisms, effectively reducing pathogens such as Salmonella, E. coli O157:H7, and Campylobacter. By preventing these organisms from multiplying, irradiation enhances food safety without relying on heat-based processes.
Stay ahead of the industry with exclusive feature stories on the top companies, expert insights and the latest news delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe today.
In addition to pathogen control, irradiation serves as an effective method for extending shelf life. Low-dose applications inhibit sprouting in tubers, slow the ripening of produce, and minimize spoilage caused by molds and bacteria. The technology also offers a reliable solution for disinfestation, eliminating insect pests in grains, fruits, and vegetables and enabling a non-chemical alternative to fumigation—an essential advantage for meeting phytosanitary requirements in global trade.
Extensive evaluations by the World Health Organization (WHO), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and other global authorities confirm that irradiated food is safe to consume. The process does not induce radioactivity in food and results in nutrient retention comparable to traditional preservation methods, such as thermal processing or canning.
International Policy and Regulatory Harmonization
Global harmonization of food irradiation practices is grounded in standards set by international bodies to promote safety, quality, and consistency across borders. The Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC), a joint initiative of the WHO and FAO, established the foundational regulatory framework through the General Standard for Irradiated Foods and the Recommended International Code of Practice for the Operation of Irradiation Facilities. These standards initially set a maximum absorbed dose of 10 kGy for most foods, while acknowledging that higher doses may be used for specific technological purposes—such as sterilized diets for immunocompromised individuals—provided food safety and wholesomeness are maintained. Codex also emphasizes adherence to Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) and Good Irradiation Practice (GIP), ensuring irradiation complements rather than replaces proper hygiene and handling procedures.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) further supports global policy alignment by collaborating with the FAO to build technical capacity among member states. Its efforts focus on ensuring that national regulatory frameworks align with international best practices, ultimately facilitating the safe application of irradiation technologies and enhancing the efficiency of global food trade.
As the global food system faces challenges related to supply chain resilience and increasing rates of foodborne illness, policy frameworks are expected to evolve. Anticipated policy directions include the adoption of generic treatments for broad pest categories, advancement of machine-generated irradiation technologies such as e-beam and X-ray to reduce dependence on radionuclides, and stricter enforcement of the "no substitute for hygiene" principle. These measures aim to position irradiation as an additional safety layer rather than a remedy for inadequate food-handling practices.
More in News