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TECHNOLOGY
Food-tracking blockchain wins big with FDA’s new food recall policy
The US Food and Drug Administration’s 26 September announcement that it plans to name retailers selling food that is being recalled, instead of focusing just on food manufacturers, looks like a big win for food-tracking blockchain. GlobalData explores the technology’s future in recalls.
The Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) draft rules are primarily intended to apply to ‘serious recalls’ where consuming affected food ‘has a reasonable probability of causing serious adverse health consequences or death to humans or animals.’ While this is a high bar for disclosure, the FDA’s announcement is likely to drive adoption of food-tracking blockchain technology on an industry-wide scale, sooner rather than later.
In the past, the FDA has been reluctant to share the names of specific stores selling recalled food because of concerns over supplier-retailer relationships. This concern is ebbing as the FDA puts more emphasis on safety, and less on confidentiality.
Blockchain will no longer be ‘optional’ for some Walmart suppliers in 2019
Some food retailers have already climbed aboard the blockchain train. Just days before the FDA’s announcement, Walmart set a deadline of 31 January 2019 for direct suppliers of lettuce, spinach, and other greens to join its food-tracking blockchain initiative, one it calls ‘the equivalent of FedEx tracking for food.’
Greens have been especially prone to contamination as they are perishable, difficult to sanitise, and are consumed shortly after purchase. Earlier this year, E. coli contamination of romaine lettuce grown in the Yuma, Arizona region spread to 36 states, sickening hundreds of Americans and killing five, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Investigators spent months trying to pinpoint the contamination source.
According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, every lettuce processor in the US took a financial hit from the romaine lettuce contamination episode including companies that were not part of the outbreak. Confusion reigned in the early stages of the outbreak as investigators struggled to identify the source of the problem. Food-tracking blockchain should make that task faster and easier. Unlike conventional paper or electronic records which tend to be siloed and lacking in uniformity, blockchain enables real-time tracking and is encrypted and stored in a shared digital ledger.
‘Big Food’ puts trust in IBM’s Food Trust
‘Big Food’ has already been experimenting with food-tracking blockchain. Nestle, together with nine other food makers and retailers including Unilever, Tyson Foods, Dole Food, Driscoll’s, and Kroger, have conducted over a year of tests on a new blockchain system called Food Trust that is based on IBM’s blockchain technology.
Blockchain preserves one consistent history of transactions and also establishes ownership and authorship credentials that cannot be faked. It also increases the potential for more surgical food recalls by enabling trace-backs that can be run in seconds, not days or weeks. This means that food makers may encounter fewer costly blanket recalls. Consumer awareness of breakthrough technologies like blockchain may be low, but interest in the issues that blockchain can address is high, especially for supermarkets.
Blockchain addresses a key factor that drives supermarket choice
High-quality fresh produce is the single most influential factor when deciding where to shop for groceries and blockchain can help ensure that fresh produce stays ‘high-quality.’ According to a GlobalData 2018 Q3 consumer survey, 69% of global consumers said high-quality fresh produce was the most influential factor in deciding where to shop for groceries. That even trumps low prices, selected by 67% of respondents.
This indicates that wide adoption of blockchain within the supermarket industry may come faster than many expect. If it does, it could give multinationals a new way to push back against local foods. Consumers tend to see “local” products as more traceable and safer than national or global products. Blockchain chips away at both beliefs.
Blockchain also addresses what American consumers perceive to be the single most important food issue today: foodborne illness from bacteria. According to the International Food Information Council Foundation’s 2018 Food & Health Survey, 24% of Americans cited foodborne illness from bacteria as the top food safety concern, bettering issues like carcinogens and chemicals in food, pesticide residues, allergens, and food additives.
Carrefour leads a quantum leap
in transparency
The irony of blockchain is that its biggest impact for the average consumer may end up being enhanced food safety and transparency, not heavily hyped digital currency (cryptocurrency) used for transactions. France’s Carrefour provides a tantalising glimpse of where this technology may take us. Earlier this year, Carrefour announced the launch of blockchain technology for its free-range Carrefour Quality Line Auvergne chickens as well as eight other animal and vegetable product lines ranging from eggs, cheese, and milk, to salmon and ground beef steak.
Carrefour’s initiative is much more consumer-facing than anything that the Food Trust 10 appear to have planned. QR code product labels on the Carrefour products above will allow consumers to scan labels and chart the journey that each product has taken.
That journey includes details like where and how each chicken was raised including the name of the farmer that raised the chicken, what feed was used, treatments used, and even gory details like where the animal was slaughtered. This may be too much information for some, but the end result is going to be a new level of transparency that few consumers could conceive of – near-total transparency.
The FDA’s draft rules are primarily intended to apply to ‘serious recalls’ where consuming affected food ‘has a reasonable probability of causing serious adverse health consequences or death to humans or animals.’ While this is a high bar for disclosure, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)’s announcement is likely to drive adoption of food-tracking blockchain technology on an industrywide scale, sooner rather than later.
In the past, the FDA has been reluctant to share the names of specific stores selling recalled food because of concerns over supplier-retailer relationships. This concern is ebbing as the FDA puts more emphasis on safety, and less on confidentiality.
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Blockchain will no longer be ‘optional’ for some Walmart suppliers in 2019
Some food retailers have already climbed aboard the blockchain train. Just days before the FDA’s announcement, Walmart set a deadline of 31 January 2019 for direct suppliers of lettuce, spinach, and other greens to join its food-tracking blockchain initiative, one it calls ‘the equivalent of FedEx tracking for food.’
Greens have been especially prone to contamination as they are perishable, difficult to sanitize, and are consumed shortly after purchase. Earlier this year, E. coli contamination of romaine lettuce grown in the Yuma, Arizona region spread to 36 states, sickening hundreds of Americans and killing five, per the Centers for Disease Control. Investigators spent months trying to pinpoint the contamination source.
According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, every lettuce processor in the US took a financial hit from the romaine lettuce contamination episode including companies that were not part of the outbreak. Confusion reigned in the early stages of the outbreak as investigators struggled to identify the source of the problem. Food-tracking blockchain should make that task faster and easier. Unlike conventional paper or electronic records which tend to be siloed and lacking in uniformity, blockchain enables real-time tracking and is encrypted and stored in a shared digital ledger.
Some 58% of those looking to lose weight doing so by following healthier diets
‘Big Food’ puts trust in IBM’s Food Trust
‘Big Food’ has already been experimenting with food-tracking blockchain. Nestle, together with nine other food makers and retailers including Unilever, Tyson Foods, Dole Food, Driscoll’s, and Kroger, have conducted over a year of tests on a new blockchain system called Food Trust that is based on IBM’s blockchain technology.
Blockchain preserves one consistent history of transactions and also establishes ownership and authorship credentials that cannot be faked. It also increases the potential for more surgical food recalls by enabling trace-backs that can be run in seconds, not days or weeks. This means that food makers may encounter fewer costly blanket recalls. Consumer awareness of breakthrough technologies like blockchain may be low, but interest in the issues that blockchain can address is high, especially for supermarkets.
Looking to stable pillars of the trend such as natural food is sensible, but operators should also consider the trends that make up the consumer engagement with health in foodservice
Blockchain addresses a key factor that drives supermarket choice
High-quality fresh produce is the single most influential factor when deciding where to shop for groceries and blockchain can help ensure that fresh produce stays ‘high-quality.’ According to a GlobalData 2018 Q3 consumer survey, 69% of global consumers said high-quality fresh produce was the most influential factor in deciding where to shop for groceries. That even trumps low prices, selected by 67% of respondents.
This indicates that wide adoption of blockchain within the supermarket industry may come faster than many expect. If it does, it could give multinationals a new way to push back against local foods. Consumers tend to see “local” products as more traceable and safer than national or global products. Blockchain chips away at both beliefs.
Blockchain also addresses what American consumers perceive to be the single most important food issue today: foodborne illness from bacteria. According to the International Food Information Council Foundation’s 2018 Food & Health Survey, 24% of Americans cited foodborne illness from bacteria as the top food safety concern, bettering issues like carcinogens and chemicals in food, pesticide residues, allergens, and food additives.
Carrefour leads a quantum leap in transparency
The irony of blockchain is that its biggest impact for the average consumer may end up being enhanced food safety and transparency, not heavily hyped digital currency (cryptocurrency) used for transactions. France’s Carrefour provides a tantalizing glimpse of where this technology may take us. Earlier this year, Carrefour announced the launch of blockchain technology for its free-range Carrefour Quality Line Auvergne chickens as well as eight other animal and vegetable product lines ranging from eggs, cheese, and milk, to salmon and ground beef steak.
Carrefour’s initiative is much more consumer-facing than anything that the Food Trust 10 appear to have planned. QR code product labels on the Carrefour products above will allow consumers to scan labels and chart the journey that each product has taken.
That journey includes details like where and how each chicken was raised including the name of the farmer that raised the chicken, what feed was used, treatments used, and even gory details like where the animal was slaughtered. This may be too much information for some, but the end result is going to be a new level of transparency that few consumers could conceive of – near-total transparency.
GlobalData found that 45% of consumers are unsure about, or disagree with the idea, that convenience food can also be healthy