Sunday, April 17, 2022

Managing Air Filtration in Commercial Bakeries for Healthier Employees and Safer Food

Production processes in commercial bakeries can generate high volumes of particulate or molecular pollutants, so maintaining air quality is needed to protect food from contamination and minimize health risks for workers. This is best achieved by using appropriate air filtration and ventilation. 

When food residue is drawn into air handling units, air filters can become clogged, restricting airflow. When this happens, there is insufficient airflow to adequately move contaminants from the space and into the air filters . The particles then hang in the air, creating a smog-like effect, or they settle and accumulate on floors and equipment. This becomes a food safety and employee health issue.

Common sources of food dust at commercial bakeries include flour, grains, spices, egg shell, cornstarch, sugar and flavoring additives. Bioaerosols are another challenge. These solid or liquid particles carry microbes through the air that land on food during processing. In addition, airborne allergen particles can cause serious health problems for exposed workers or consumers of the end products. 

DOWNLOAD COMMERCIAL BAKERY CASE STUDY 

Dust Dangers in Commercial Bakeries

Regular exposure to small particles of food dust can produce allergic reactions such as skin, nose and throat irritation. The finest dust particles easily become airborne and are inhaled, penetrating deep within the lungs. 

Respiratory conditions resulting from workplace exposure can be serious and chronic, such as baker’s asthma. This type of asthma is caused by breathing in allergens or the flour and grains that are added to baked goods in commercial bakery facilities. Afflicted workers can experience coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath and chest tightness. Slips and falls are another concern at bakery facilities. Managing airborne dust minimizes slippery floors.

Baking processes that create high concentrations of airborne dust include loading flour and other powdered ingredients into mixers, dusting flour onto baking surfaces, sweeping food dusts from surfaces and disposing of flour bags. The health effects of inhaling food dust depend on the concentration of the airborne particles and length of exposure. Frequent low-level exposure might not create symptoms for up to thirty years.

Employers are required to follow OSHA’s General Duty Clause, which requires them to provide employees with a safe workplace that does not have any known hazards that cause or are likely to cause death or serious injury. It is also the employer’s responsibility to notify employees of immediate known dangers. In addition, specific state and local regulations or permits may apply.

“Not all exposures to poor indoor air quality cause symptoms, but the health hazards are there. That’s why air filtration management is important for maintaining a safe work environment,” said Steve Smith, CamCleaner Segment Manager at Camfil USA.

While employee health is a key concern, excess dust also settles and accumulates on pieces of equipment and drifts into the return air exhaust ductwork and other sections of ventilation systems. These particles in the HVAC system cause dust layering that increases operation costs due to frequent filter changes, duct cleanings and reduced transfer efficiency of the heating/cooling coils.

Bioaerosol Hazards in Commercial Bakeries

Bacteria, viruses and other infectious contaminants ride on particles of dirt or dust, getting into food when it is being prepared and processed. Common bioaerosols include bacteria like Listeria, E. coli, Brucella, Salmonella, and various molds and yeasts. 

Sources of pollutants like these include malfunctioning or poorly maintained HVAC systems, compressed unfiltered air lines and standing water. People working at the facility can also release bioaerosols into the air. These contaminant particles can remain suspended for a period of time, then eventually settle on surfaces. When food comes into contact with these pathogens, it could become contaminated, causing a food safety hazard.

For commercial bakery workers, inhaling bioaerosols can cause respiratory conditions like asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Ingesting food contaminated with certain bacteria can cause serious digestive problems and in some cases even kidney failure. 

The recent pandemic has raised awareness across the board that dangerous airborne particles are present in indoor air. Many commercial bakery operators are improving their ventilation systems by including the appropriate air filtration for their facility. Also driving this trend is the desire to reduce food safety dangers and safeguard employee health. Air filters act as a barrier between the contaminants and workers and food products. 

Commercial bakery facilities should have HVAC systems working optimally to keep bioaerosol emissions as low as possible. The appropriate high-efficiency HVAC air filters should be used in these systems to capture bioaerosols and prevent them from circulating. Ventilating the facility with outside air can also decrease concentrations of air contaminants within the building.

“To reduce the levels of bioaerosols within bakery facilities, it is important to have an air filtration expert evaluate each area of the operation. In addition to appropriate HVAC air filtration, supplemental commercial air cleaning systems can be installed to trap and neutralize harmful airborne contaminants,” Smith noted.

Managing Air Filtration and Airflow

Properly maintaining a bakery facility’s HVAC system helps to provide suitable air quality. Selecting appropriate air filters for different areas of the facility based on contamination risk is an effective way to reduce the threats from airborne contaminants while improving airflow and lowering maintenance costs.  

In addition to removing harmful airborne contaminants, a commercial air filter works to maintain consistent airflow throughout the facility. In particular, high-efficiency filters can hold large volumes of particles within the filter media while maintaining a low air resistance. 

“Often in commercial bakeries, multiple stages of air filtration are necessary, with final filters in the MERV 14/14A to MERV 16/16A range, depending on the application,” Smith recommended. 

To ensure safe indoor air quality throughout the bakery facility, it is important to evaluate the various production areas to determine the appropriate level of air filtration and air cleaning solutions needed for each location. Lower-risk areas such as food storage will often have different requirements than higher-risk locations like food preparation stations. Sufficient airflow is also necessary in high-risk areas that require space pressurization control. 

Ventilation systems work to optimize air pressure through the building, which is important because high-hygiene areas require higher pressure. Airflow should start in the cleanest areas and cascade toward less clean areas, like the receiving area, until the air is exhausted from the building.

DOWNLOAD COMMERCIAL BAKERY CASE STUDY 

Air Cleaning Solutions 

In commercial bakery facilities that have expanded over time, the HVAC system might not have been designed to achieve the necessary air filtration efficiency or airflow for each production area. If possible, retrofit or replace the system to achieve adequate levels. If the HVAC system cannot be upgraded, supplemental air cleaners can be installed to maintain good indoor air quality. 

Air cleaners are specially designed to continuously recirculate the air through a filtration system that is separate from the HVAC system  filters. Air filtration experts can help bakery operators determine the optimum installation locations to capture contaminants and improve airflow patterns. For example, they can be placed above challenging areas on the plant floor and draw air through a series of air filters selected for that specific application.

There are two factors necessary for effective performance of an air cleaner. First, look at the air filter’s minimum efficiency reporting value (MERV-A) rating, which is used to characterize how well it removes different-sized particles in the air. Next, determine how much air the air cleaner draws through the filter, expressed in cubic feet per minute (cfm). 

“Commercial air cleaners not only improve indoor air quality and airflow, they also improve the lifespan of the main HVAC system air filters,” Smith added. 

Camfil CamCleaner Clears Bakery Facility Air

The Camfil CamCleaner is an ideal air cleaner to remove particulates and bioaerosol contaminants from commercial bakeries. It is a modular system that can fit into most bakery production areas, especially locations where direct source capture might be difficult.  The CamCleaner unit is typically installed suspended from the ceiling. It is especially useful in areas that have a high load of dust or fumes and high aerosol particulate concentrations.

“A series of CamCleaner units can be strategically placed in a bakery production area to create the best air pattern and substantially reduce airborne particulates,” Smith explained. “The clean air from one unit pushes the contaminated air to the inlet of the next unit, based on the required number of air changes per hour.”

CamCleaners are available in two sizes of air delivery, 2000 cfm and 4000 cfm, and each unit can provide multiple stages of air filtration. Configuration of air filtration can include a prefilter, a secondary or final filter, and/or a HEPA or molecular filter as the final stage.

Available filters include pleated prefilters in the MERV 8A to MERV 9A range to capture heavy contaminant loads, secondary filters that could include MERVE 13A through MERV 16A, molecular filters to control irritants, VOCs and odors, and HEPA filters to protect highly sensitive areas where cross-contamination is a concern. The system can return the clean air back into the bakery facility near its source, or it can be directed elsewhere in the facility to help improve positive air pressure.

Implementing an air quality program in commercial baking facilities by using appropriate air filtration and ventilation is the best way to protect workers and food products and to comply with regulatory standards. 

DOWNLOAD COMMERCIAL BAKERY CASE STUDY 

About Camfil Clean Air Solutions

 

For more than half a century, Camfil has been helping people breathe cleaner air. As a leading manufacturer of premium clean air solutions, we provide commercial and industrial systems for air filtration and air pollution control that improve worker and equipment productivity, minimize energy use, and benefit human health and the environment. 

 

We firmly believe that the best solutions for our customers are the best solutions for our planet, too. That’s why every step of the way—from design to delivery and across the product life cycle —we consider the impact of what we do on people and on the world around us. Through a fresh approach to problem-solving, innovative design, precise process control and a strong customer focus we aim to conserve more, use less and find better ways—so we can all breathe easier.

 

The Camfil Group is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, and has 31​ manufacturing sites, six R&D centers, local sales offices in 30 countries, and about 5,200 employees and growing. We proudly serve and support customers in a wide variety of industries and communities across the world. To discover how Camfil USA can help you to protect people, processes and the environment, visit us at www.camfil.us/. 

Canadian customers follow Camfil Air Filters Blog 

DOWNLOAD COMMERCIAL BAKERY CASE STUDY 

The post Managing Air Filtration in Commercial Bakeries for Healthier Employees and Safer Food appeared first on Air Filters for Clean Air.



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Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Biden Administration Launches National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan, Providing EPA-Backed Air Filtration Guidance for COVID Prevention in Schools and Public Buildings

Biden Administration Launches National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan, Providing EPA-Backed Air Filtration Guidance for COVID Prevention in Schools and Public Buildings

The White House  has recently announced the launch of the official National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan, which is made available as a fact sheet on the executive branch’s official website, whitehouse.gov. 

In this article, air filtration experts from Camfil break down the Clean Air Buildings Checklist, an EPA resource designed to help managers of public buildings (such as schools and offices) ensure that their air filtration systems are adequate to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and other pathogens. 

What Is the National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan About?

The National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan is a comprehensive fact sheet explaining the Biden-Harris Administration’s plans across various domains to prevent further health or economic crisis as a result of the ongoing pandemic. 

The Preparedness Plan is broken down into the following areas: 

  • Protecting against and treating COVID-19 
  • Preparing for new variants 
  • Preventing economic and educational shutdown 
  • Continuing to vaccinate the world 

While there are many factors covered in the National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan due to the vast array of areas of everyday life that the pandemic has affected, the Administration highlights the importance of implementing and improving existing air filtration infrastructure to protect the public against disease. Air filtration and ventilation are addressed in the “Prevent Economic and Educational Shutdown” section, but adequate air filtration is also an important factor in protecting the public against COVID-19 and in preparing for the spread of potential new variants. 

Related: Air Pollution and COVID-19 — Study Shows Exposure to Air Pollution Increases Risk of Getting Sick with  COVID-19 

How Will the White House Help Improve IAQ to Prevent COVID-19?

As detailed in the National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan and accompanying releases by the White House, the Administration has detailed several ways that they will advance indoor air quality in public buildings across the country:

  1. Funding. Congress and the Biden Administration have allocated hundreds of billions of dollars that can be used to fund clean air initiatives in schools and other government-run buildings. The American Rescue Plan has provided $350 billion for state and local governments in addition to $122 billion for schools to enhance infrastructure, including HVAC and air filtration systems. Additional funding will come from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. 
  2. Build awareness. By building awareness around topics related to disease transmission routes and prevention through air filtration, the Administration hopes to spread knowledge and understanding of how air filtration and ventilation can keep us safe from COVID-19 moving forward. 
  3. Encouraging scientific and technological innovation. Working towards the shared goal of reducing indoor transmission rates, the Office of Science and Technology Policy is working alongside the Pandemic Innovation Task Force to identify opportunities for innovation and incentivize scientists and engineers to bridge that gap. 

Clean Air in Buildings Checklist Explained — Air Filtration Tips from Experts 

The United States Environmental Protection Agency has worked with the White House to create the Clean Air in Buildings Checklist, which is an actionable list of steps that building and facilities managers are encouraged to take in order to protect building tenants and guests. 

(To find out more about how COVID-19 spreads through the air, read Camfil’s Viruses and Air Filtration FAQs.) 

The checklist contains main steps, broken down into the following sections:

  1. Create an action plan for clean indoor air in your building 
  2. Optimize fresh air ventilation 
  3. Enhance air filtration and cleaning 
  4. Get your community engaged 

While the checklist is an excellent resource for building managers to create an actionable set of steps, our indoor air quality experts from Camfil have some additional tips to share to help you through the process of optimizing your building’s air filtration and ventilation systems. 

  • Understand indoor air quality (IAQ). 

An important aspect of finding the correct air filtration solutions to protect your building occupants is determining your building’s indoor air quality (IAQ). According to the EPA, indoor air quality refers to the “air quality within and around buildings and structures, especially as it relates to the health and comfort of building occupants.”

Indoor air quality is affected by a variety of pollutants that come from different sources. Respiratory droplets and aerosols that carry the SARS-CoV-2 virus are classified as particulate matter. Other types of particulate matter include pollen, pet dander, dust, and black carbon, which have both long-term and short-term impacts on lung and heart health. 

Identifying the pollutants that affect your building’s air quality is a key piece of deciding what air filters will best address your needs. 

  • Find out how your building’s airflow affects the spread of COVID-19. 

In addition to identifying the types and sources of pollution present in your building, it is important to understand your building’s airflow. Airflow is how air moves around the building.   What is the rated airflow of  the HVAC system;  how well does it circulate throughout the building; how and where does it exit the building?  

Understanding your building’s airflow can help you identify points that need to be prioritized when it comes to air filtration, as well as ways in which you can improve your building’s ventilation and air circulation. 

  • Know what air filtration solutions can deliver on their promises.

Because of the increased emphasis placed on the importance of air filtration by government agencies such as the EPA over the past several years, the market is oversaturated with products that make big promises about what they can do. Some claim to be able to kill the virus that causes COVID-19, while others promise HEPA filtration at a lower price than a new microwave. 

Actual HEPA air filters should carry a label indicating they’ve been tested at the factory. HEPA filters without evidence of proper testing may not deliver the particle capture efficiency as promised. HVAC air filters are not individually tested but should be labeled with their MERV and MERV-A value to ensure you are getting what you paid for and expected.  

Find out more about the COVID-19 air filtration trends that work and the ones that don’t in this article. 

  • Consider a variety of air filtration options. 

Officials have highlighted MERV-13 panel filters that are housed in a building’s HVAC system, but there are plenty of other options if your HVAC system cannot house MERV-13 air filters. An air purifier with HEPA filtration, for example, will provide high-traffic areas such as classrooms, cafeterias, and breakrooms with the highest quality air filtration modern technology has to offer. This can be used to supplement your HVAC system’s filters. 

  • Work alongside an HVAC and air filtration expert.

As a building or facilities manager, you have dozens of responsibilities to manage, each of which requires specific expertise. Air filtration and ventilation are no different; there are people that dedicate their careers to understanding airflow and indoor air quality. By working with an expert in the air filtration industry, you will have step-by-step guidance all the way through the process of assessing your building’s IAQ, understanding your building’s airflow, and choosing the best air filtration and ventilation options for you. 

Related: Understanding Air Filtration Language — Air Filtration and Indoor Air Quality Glossary

About Camfil Clean Air Solutions

For more than half a century, Camfil has been helping people breathe cleaner air. As a leading manufacturer of premium clean air solutions, we provide commercial and industrial systems for air filtration and air pollution control that improve worker and equipment productivity, minimize energy use, and benefit human health and the environment. We firmly believe that the best solutions for our customers are the best solutions for our planet, too. That’s why every step of the way – from design to delivery and across the product life cycle – we consider the impact of what we do on people and on the world around us. Through a fresh approach to problem-solving, innovative design, precise process control, and a strong customer focus we aim to conserve more, use less and find better ways – so we can all breathe easier.

The Camfil Group is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, and has 31​ manufacturing sites, six R&D centers, local sales offices in 35+ countries, and about 5,200 employees and growing. We proudly serve and support customers in a wide variety of industries and in communities across the world. To discover how Camfil USA can help you to protect people, processes and the environment, visit us at www.camfil.us/ 

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Media Contact: 

Lynne Laake 

Camfil USA Air Filters 

T: 888.599.6620 

E: Lynne.Laake@camfil.com

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Y: Watch Camfil Videos on YouTube

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Source:

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/03/17/fact-sheet-biden-administration-launches-effort-to-improve-ventilation-and-reduce-the-spread-of-covid-19-in-buildings/

https://www.whitehouse.gov/covidplan/

https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2022-03/508-cleanairbuildings_factsheet_v5_508.pdf

 

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