After the November 2021 flooding events in British Columbia, many agricultural production areas were negatively impacted. Flooding may potentially expose food crops to food safety hazards. Growers are responsible to ensure that food products are produced as safely as possible for human consumption. Food safety starts at the farm with good agricultural practices and applicable food safety legislation.
All flood-impacted producers are encouraged to carry out and keep records of a detailed risk assessment (PDF, 774KB), regardless of whether their operation is formally certified to a food safety standard.
A risk assessment will help determine the impact of the flooding on the entire operation, including the farmyard, fields, buildings and equipment, water sources, and existing and future crops. Producers will need to consider their own operations and neighbouring activities, as these provide clues as to what may have brought contamination or hazard sources onto their property.
Potential sources of contamination can be categorized into biological, chemical, or physical hazards.
Biological hazards are microorganisms, some of which are disease-causing such as bacteria, viruses, parasites, fungi, and moulds. Common sources of biological hazards are manure, human sewage, and animal mortalities. Most biological hazards are broken down through exposure to microorganisms or UV light, over time. Healthy soil will accelerate the decomposition process.
Chemical hazards are poisonous or toxic substances. Common sources of chemical hazards are pesticides, fuels, paints, and industrial chemicals. Some chemical hazards are broken down by microorganisms or exposure to UV light such as some fuel-based chemicals and most pesticides.
Other chemical hazards such as heavy metals can not be broken down and levels will only decrease after a prolonged period of time (many years). An example is chromated copper arsenic (CCA) used for preservation of timber. The extent that those substances are available for uptake by crops varies widely depending on various soil properties. Healthy soils may help to immobilize some chemical hazards.
Physical hazards are foreign objects or unwanted materials such as glass, wood, metal, plastics, rocks.
Documentation, including photos and written records, are an important part of food safety. The most important data to collect and document following a natural disaster flooding event describes:
Producers in flooded areas should be aware that:
Soil testing can be useful but will likely not be necessary for many sites. Before proceeding to soil sampling, consider whether testing will provide meaningful information:
In general, the flood-related food safety hazards to above-ground perennial plants that were submerged in floodwaters and that will not be harvested until next summer, e.g. blueberries, will be reduced due to the length of time between the flood event and harvest and the exposure of above ground branches to environmental conditions. Extra care should be taken to prevent cross contamination through handling of plant material, gloves, and tools.
For future plantings, ready-to-eat vegetable crops (consumed raw) and root crops can present a higher risk in areas where contamination occurred.
If chemical contamination is observed or reasonably suspected based on a spill nearby, consider the following options:
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