From trough to table: mapping the food chain saves livesTracking produce prevents the spread of disease and tackles food fraud
The use of mapping technologies makes it easier to ensure
that no unexpected ingredients end up in our food. Photograph: Jochen
Tack/Alamy
Simon Thompson
Friday 16 January 201507.26 EST
Nearly half of global manufacturers say they
don’t have any visibility past their direct suppliers – in other words, they
don’t know what is happening in their supply chain. While they may audit first
tier suppliers, they usually cannot see beyond them to their suppliers’
suppliers.
In the food industry, a meat packaging plant
buys meat from a supplier, which in turn buys beef from multiple farms in an
area. The packaging plant keeps records on its supplier, but does it know the
cleanliness ratings and health history of those farms?
Applying higher standards to information
collection and management will reducethe impact animal disease has on global food production and
have huge public health benefits. Last year, faecal matter was found in more than 80% of ground turkey in 21
states across the US. The
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found salmonella not
only in poultry, but also in bean sprouts, nut butter, chia powder and cheese.
It estimates that, each year, roughly one in six Americans get sick, 128,000
are hospitalised and 3,000 die from food-borne diseases.
Consumers with religious and cultural reasons
for not eating certain foods should also be concerned about supply chain
transparency. When pork was found in Ikea’s moose lasagna, sold
in Europe, many in the Jewish and Islamic communities were upset. And in
Malaysia, a predominantly Muslim nation,Cadbury’s suffered a major hit when swine
DNA was found in candy bars. These events leave many wondering how it happened
and what other cross-contaminations remain undiscovered.
Researchers are finding that popular products
include more than the content on their packaging. Honey, maple syrup and orange juice are just a
few examples of foods regularly enhanced with corn syrup.
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Yuck factor aside – horsemeat found
in beef products in the UK left many consumers feeling queasy – some
substitutions and contaminations can also be dangerous. Olive oil is one of the most frequently
adulterated foods. Its health benefits are well publicised and extra virgin oil
demands a premium price. Yet some producers have been found using less
expensive oils to cut costs, including nut oils. This reduces the quality of
the olive oil; more importantly, substituting nut oils can be life-threatening
to those with allergies.
A bright spot in all this is food testing. It
not only ensures food quality and safety, but also prevents food fraud, which costs the global food industry an estimated $30bn-$40bn
(£19.7bn-£26.3bn) each year (pdf), according to the Global Food
Safety Initiative.
Where transparency is concerned, understanding
the location of each point in the journey food travels from trough to table is
essential. One of the best ways to achieve this is through mapping.
By linking geographic information (all the
locations that, for example, the ground meat, lettuce, cheese and sesame seed
bun come from) to non-spatial data (the name and lot number of the cow, and the
firm processing it), it’s possible to simplify the complex web of origins and
process points so food chains can be more easily understood, accessed, traced
and tracked.
In 2004, an outbreak of avian influenza in
British Columbia, Canada, led to more than $500m (£330m) in damages and lost
productivity. In 2007, the Canadian province of Manitoba took part in an
exercise replicating the same outbreak. They found that waiting until an
outbreak occurred to collect and map information on food production premises
was unreliable and slow.
As a result, the government of Manitoba
implemented a mandatory identification program using a geographic information
system (GIS) that required assigning a unique number to any premise in the
province where livestock and poultry were grown, kept or disposed of. The
government created precise knowledge about the location of livestock along with
information on legal land descriptions, owners, emergency contacts and animal
information.
This data is now used to track and visualise
disease spread and identify ways to contain and eradicate it. Not only is it
more efficient, cost effective and quicker than traditional door-to-door
investigations, it’s also more accurate and easier to oversee.
Collecting this data is not as daunting as it
might seem. Most farm equipment has built-in GPS that collects and logs
location data automatically. This data is easily shared, managed, analysed and
viewed in a GIS. GPS data becomes valuable information about how people,
livestock and products move between locations and how food products are
processed. When cows are sold to new owners, there is a history of where they
came from. Should one farm be involved in an incident or outbreak, the impact
and implications can quickly be assessed and measures taken to correct or
mitigate future problems.
GIS technology is not expensive, enabling even
small farms and local suppliers to access online tools to import, view, track,
share and analyse their production data, as well as multinational conglomerates
of course. Farmers can more easily provide information on where every crop or
animal is grown or raised for accountability. Contractors, third-party
businesses, government agencies and insurance companies have evidence of every
ingredient’s journey as it passes their doors. In turn, this transparency can
be used to help consumers feel less anxious about the safety of their food.
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