In the early 1960s, a collaborated effort between the
Pillsbury Company, NASA, and the U.S. Army Laboratories began with the objective to provide
safe food for space expeditions. People involved in this collaboration included Herbert Hollander,
Mary Klicka, and Hamed El-Bisi of the
United States Army Laboratories in
Natick, Massachusetts, Paul A. Lachance of the
Manned Spacecraft Center in
Houston, Texas, and Howard E. Baumann representing Pillsbury as its lead scientist. To ensure that the food sent to space was safe, Lachance imposed strict
microbial requirements, including
pathogen limits (including
E. coli,
Salmonella, and
Clostridium botulinum). were first published in 1969. Pillsbury's training program, which was submitted to the FDA for review in 1969, entitled "Food Safety through the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point System" was the first use of the acronym HACCP. Pillsbury quickly adopted two more principles, numbers three and five, to its own company in 1975. It was further supported by the
National Academy of Sciences (NAS) when they wrote that the FDA inspection agency should transform itself from reviewing plant records into an HACCP system compliance
auditor. Over the period 1986 to 1990, a team consisting of
National Sea Products and the
Department of Fisheries and Oceans developed the first mandatory food inspection programme based on HACCP principles in the world. Together, these Canadian innovators developed and implemented a
Total Quality Management Program and HACCP plans for all their
groundfish trawlers and production facilities. A second proposal by the NAS led to the development of the
National Advisory Committee on Microbiological Criteria for Foods (NACMCF) in 1987. NACMCF was initially responsible for defining HACCP's systems and guidelines for its application and were coordinated with the
Codex Alimentarius Committee for Food Hygiene, that led to reports starting in 1992 and further harmonization in 1997. By 1997, the seven HACCP principles listed below became the standard. First known as Certified Quality Auditor-HACCP, they were changed to Certified HACCP Auditor (CHA) in 2004. HACCP expanded in all realms of the food industry, going into meat, poultry, seafood, dairy, and has spread now from the farm to the fork. ==Principles==