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Sahawatthanakit (1988) Engineering Team8 min read

Food-Grade Lubricants NSF H1 / H2 / H3 and ISO 21469 — A Selection Guide for Food & Beverage Plants in Thailand

Understand food-grade lubricants for food factories: NSF H1 (incidental food contact), H2, H3, the ISO 21469 standard, FDA 21 CFR 178.3570, how they map to HACCP/GMP (Thai FDA), and a selection checklist to pass BRC/FSSC 22000 audits.

lubricantfood-gradensf-h1iso-21469haccpgmpfood-factorythailand
NSF H1 food-grade lubricant for machinery on a food and beverage production line

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สรุป (TL;DR)

Understand food-grade lubricants for food factories: NSF H1 (incidental food contact), H2, H3, the ISO 21469 standard, FDA 21 CFR 178.3570, how they map to HACCP/GMP (Thai FDA), and a selection checklist to pass BRC/FSSC 22000 audits.

Food and beverage plants in Thailand invest heavily in GMP, HACCP, and cleaning systems — yet one risk is overlooked more than any other: the lubricants on machinery in the production line.

If oil from a chain, gearbox, or bearing above a conveyor drips or splashes into food — even a trace — that is a chemical hazard an auditor will flag immediately, and it can lead to a non-conformance, a product recall, or the loss of an export customer.

The answer is a food-grade lubricant registered as NSF H1 or certified to ISO 21469. This article explains what they are, how to choose, and how they tie into your plant's HACCP/GMP.


1. NSF H1 / H2 / H3 — Three Categories You Must Distinguish

NSF International classifies food-grade lubricants by their "chance of food contact" into three categories:

Category Definition Where used Basis
NSF H1 May contact food "incidentally" chain, gearbox, bearing, compressor, hydraulics — above/near open food FDA 21 CFR 178.3570 + contamination ≤ 10 ppm
NSF H2 "No possibility" of food contact motors below the line, points away from food no heavy metals/carcinogens/hazardous substances
NSF H3 soluble oil for rust prevention hooks, trolleys, equipment washed before use usually edible oil (e.g., vegetable oil)

Rule of thumb: if the lubrication point is above or near open food, always use H1. Points below the line or further away can use H2 to save cost.

There are now over 12,000 H1 lubricants registered with NSF globally, growing ~7% per year — the whole industry is shifting.


2. ISO 21469 — Why It Goes Beyond NSF H1

Many plants assume "NSF H1 is enough" — true for general work, but understand the difference in scope:

  • NSF H1 registration = reviews only the formulation — whether every ingredient is on the FDA 21 CFR 178.3570 list and the labelling is correct.
  • ISO 21469:2006 certification = everything in H1 plus:
    1. A risk assessment of the production process (formulation + manufacture + handling)
    2. A third-party audit of the actual manufacturing facility
    3. Analytical testing of the product in a lab to confirm it matches the registered formula

The standard's full title is "Safety of machinery — Lubricants with incidental product contact — Hygiene requirements" — in short: safe formula + hygienic manufacture + traceability.

How to choose: general GMP/HACCP → NSF H1 is enough. High-grade BRC or FSSC 22000 audits with strict export customers → choose ISO 21469 certified for stronger evidence.


3. FDA 21 CFR 178.3570 — The Whitelist Every Standard References

Both NSF and ISO reference the same list — FDA 21 CFR 178.3570 ("Lubricants with incidental food contact"), which defines:

  • The base oils + additives permitted in lubricants that may contact food (e.g., USP white mineral oil, PAO, certain esters)
  • A contamination ceiling of ≤ 10 ppm of lubricant in the finished food

If any ingredient is not on this list, the product cannot be registered H1. This is why food-grade lubricants use specific base oils and additives — and cost more than ordinary industrial oils.


4. HACCP: Lubrication Points Are Critical Control Points

In a HACCP system, lubrication points on machinery in the production zone are treated as Critical Control Points (CCPs) — or at minimum operational control points requiring monitoring.

Auditors consistently look for evidence that lubrication is controlled, consistent, and traceable:

  • ✓ The right product at the right point (H1 in risk zones, H2 elsewhere)
  • ✓ An NSF registration number or ISO 21469 certificate + complete SDS
  • Application records (lot number, date, responsible person)
  • Separate dispensing equipment for H1 vs ordinary industrial oil to prevent cross-contamination
flowchart TD
  A[Lubrication point on machinery] --> B{Possible incidental
food contact?} B -->|Yes - above/near line| C{High-level audit
required BRC/FSSC?} B -->|No - below/away| D[NSF H2
more economical] C -->|Yes| E[ISO 21469 certified
strongest evidence] C -->|No| F[NSF H1 registered
sufficient] G[Rust prevention hooks/trolleys] --> H[NSF H3
soluble/edible oil] E --> I[Keep cert + SDS + log
for the auditor] F --> I D --> I

5. The Thailand Context — Thai FDA GMP and Why to Start Now

Thai FDA requires food plants to pass GMP, which covers control of contamination from machinery — and lubricants are a source inspectors increasingly scrutinize.

What is making food-grade lubricant a "must-have" in Thailand:

  1. Export customers — EU/UK/Japan retailers demand BRC, IFS, FSSC 22000, which inspect lubrication more strictly than baseline GMP
  2. Modern trade in Thailand — increasingly asks suppliers for third-party certification
  3. Recall risk — the cost of one contamination event far exceeds a full year of lubricant spend

Plants still using ordinary industrial oil in the production zone are carrying a risk that is simply waiting to be caught at the next audit.


6. Selection Checklist for Food-Grade Lubricants (5 Points)

  1. Zone before you buy — run a lubrication survey: which points risk food contact (H1), which do not (H2)
  2. Ask for the NSF registration number and verify it is active in the NSF White Book online database
  3. High-level audit → ISO 21469 certified, not just H1 registered
  4. Separate the drums / grease guns / containers for food-grade from ordinary oil + color-code clearly
  5. Keep full documentation — SDS, certificate, per-lot application records ready for the auditor

We supply food-grade lubricants at NSF H1 / ISO 21469 grade (Bechem Berulub / Berusynth food-grade series) for gearboxes, chains, bearings, compressors, and hydraulics on food & beverage lines — with complete SDS + NSF certificates for audits, plus a lubrication survey to split H1/H2 points and control cost.

Talk to our engineering team to build your plant's food-grade lubrication plan — call 02-096-2118 or LINE OA @406rrgvm.


Summary

  • Food-grade lubricant is required for lubrication points in the food production zone to pass GMP/HACCP and export audits
  • NSF H1 = may incidentally contact food (risk zone) · H2 = no contact (outside zone) · H3 = rust-prevention soluble oil
  • FDA 21 CFR 178.3570 = the whitelist every standard references + a ≤ 10 ppm contamination ceiling
  • ISO 21469 exceeds H1 by auditing the plant + testing the product — choose it for high-level audits
  • In Thailand: Thai FDA GMP mandates contamination control + export customers demand BRC/FSSC, making food-grade a must-have
  • Control cost by splitting H1/H2 points, not by switching the entire plant

Done right, food-grade lubricant is not added expense — it is the cheapest insurance you can buy against the cost of a single recall.

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Frequently Asked Questions

1

What is the difference between NSF H1 and H2?

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H1 is for points where the lubricant 'may incidentally contact food' (e.g., a chain or gearbox above a conveyor). It must be formulated only from substances on the FDA 21 CFR 178.3570 list and limited to 10 ppm in the final food. H2 is for points with 'no possibility of food contact' (e.g., a motor below the line); it must contain no heavy metals or carcinogens but need not be on the H1 whitelist. Rule of thumb: if the point is above or near open food, always use H1.
2

Are food-grade lubricants mandatory for food factories in Thailand?

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Thai FDA GMP requires control of contamination from machinery, which covers lubricants even without naming a specific grade. In practice GMP/HACCP inspectors — and especially export customers demanding BRC, IFS, or FSSC 22000 — ask for NSF H1 or ISO 21469 as evidence. For exporters to the EU/US/Japan it is effectively mandatory.
3

When is ISO 21469 necessary over NSF H1?

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NSF H1 reviews only the formulation against the whitelist. ISO 21469 adds a manufacturing risk assessment, a third-party audit of the production facility, and analytical testing of the actual product. For high-level audits (BRC AA grade, FSSC 22000) ISO 21469 gives stronger, less-disputable evidence.
4

How much more do food-grade lubricants cost, and is it worth it?

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Typically 30-100% more than an equivalent industrial oil because they use approved base oils (often USP white mineral oil or PAO/synthetic) and whitelisted additives. Compared with the cost of a single contamination event — product recall, failed audit, lost export customer — the premium is small. It pays off when applied only where needed (H1 in risk zones, H2 elsewhere), not by switching the whole plant.
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