Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

This is why you ALWAYS use the correct type of glycol.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • This is why you ALWAYS use the correct type of glycol.

    Police find deadly Backer beer contamination was an accident
    https://www.foodsafetynews.com/2020/...s-an-accident/

    An investigation by police in a Brazilian state has found the contamination of beer which killed seven people was an accident likely caused by a manufacturing defect.

    Almost 30 people were poisoned by diethylene glycol after drinking beer from the Backer brewery.

    Police in Minas Gerais found a leak in a tank that started in September 2019. Eleven people linked to the company were indicted as part of the investigation but deliberate contamination was ruled out.

    However, the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply (Mapa) said tests indicate the presence of diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol in beers produced by Backer since January 2019, based on production reports provided by the company.

    MAPA analyzed more than 700 samples from the brewery and in trade and found contamination in the Belorizontina, Capitão Senra, Backer Pilsen Export, Corleone, Capixaba, Três Lobos Pilsen, Layback D2 and Bravo brands. In 53 batches the presence of diethylene glycol or ethylene glycol was detected. Contaminated drinks were produced between July 2019 and January 2020.

    A problem caused by a leak in a tank
    A statement from Backer said the findings confirmed what it had already said; that it was an accident with no intention of causing harm. However, the company added this does not exempt its responsibility and it apologized to everyone and especially, victims and their families.

    Company officials said it never bought diethylene glycol but did use mono ethylene glycol in the production process. A supplier in São Paulo is believed to have added diethylene to mono ethylene glycol. The accident was caused by a leak in one of 70 tanks, which had a manufacturing defect. A hole allowed the coolant liquid circulating in an external system to mix with the drink inside the container. It was a new tank, which started operating in early September 2019, according to Backer.

    Earlier this year, the Brazilian Health Regulatory Agency (Anvisa) provisionally banned all Backer beers across the country with an expiration date from August 2020 onwards. The Três Lobos production site in Belo Horizonte was closed in January and the company laid off 50 people with another 150 on stand-by as it intends to shortly resume activities.

    In June, the Minas Gerais State Department of Health reported that 42 suspected cases of poisoning by diethylene glycol had been reported. Of these, 36 were male and six female. Thirteen cases were confirmed, four were discarded and 25 remain under investigation. Of the 13 confirmed cases, four died, five were discharged from hospital and four are still hospitalized.

    In at least one of the deaths, the presence of diethylene glycol in the blood of a man was confirmed. Five other men and one woman are also thought to have died.

    Previously, 31 possible cases had been reported in March. Four were confirmed and 27 were being investigated but seven deaths were recorded. The increase of 11 intoxications from March to June includes three people now being counted that had not previously met the case definition as diglycolic acid was not detected in the sample. The other eight were added because of a change in the case definition going back to January 2018.
    Cheers!
    Banjo Bandolas
    Probrewer.com
    v- 541-284-5500
    banjo@probrewer.com

  • #2
    Agreed 100%. It's also why a good brewery maintenance program would never let a glycol leak go uninvestigated. Why would anyone top off glycol if the leak was not identified and corrected? Allowing drips and leaks and unidentified sources of disappearance is sloppy operations, and in this case borders on criminal. I'm afraid it's not only in developing markets either. It's a mindset of poor work habits and this knows no borders. Brewing beer for distribution to the public comes with extraordinary responsibilities. Not living up to those responsibilities will have consequences. Sometimes criminal negligence for being willfully ignorant. I think it is extremely important to know your social obligations for providing a safe product and running a tight ship. This industry isn't for everyone. Sloppy work by the worst of us will reflect on all of us. It's up to all of us to UP our game to the highest standards. Let's all do our part.
    Phillip Kelm--Palau Brewing Company Manager--

    Comment


    • #3
      I'll add: ALWAYS use a marker dye in your glycol! It's much easier to trace a leak if you can immediately tell a leak from condensation.

      We had a leak inside a fermenter many years ago. I don't check glycol levels daily, so it was the bright green beer pulled from the sample port that caught it. We use only food-grade glycol, so no one would have been poisoned, but we sure would not have wanted to sell that beer.
      Timm Turrentine

      Brewerywright,
      Terminal Gravity Brewing,
      Enterprise. Oregon.

      Comment

      Working...
      X