Food Logistics

MAR 2015

Food Logistics serves the entire food supply chain industry with targeted content for manufacturers, retailers, and distributors.

Issue link: https://foodlogistics.epubxp.com/i/490456

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 13 of 43

COOL INSIGHTS 12 MARCH 2015 • FOOD LOGISTICS www.foodlogistics.com B Y E L L I O T M A R A S T he globalization of the supply chain has made food accessible to more people than at any time in human history. No one sees this as anything but positive. But as a result, the supply chain bears more responsibility for the safety of the world's food supply. The cold chain in particular has expanded, with cold warehouse capacity proliferating worldwide. The food industry takes safety very seri- ously and invests millions of dollars a year studying ways to improve food safety and work with government in this effort. Safe practices have improved over the years and companies that produce and transport food have introduced more comprehensive proce- dures, such as the FDA's Hazard Analysis & Critical Control Points (HAACP). But the globalization of the supply chain has created the need for still better controls. Safety challenges continue Five people in Australia were recently sick- ened with Hepatitis A virus by frozen berries from China. The frozen berries were repack- aged by a company in Australia and distrib- uted to supermarkets. Health officials traced the contamination to the source in China. Here in the U.S., a Chicago, Ill., a manufac- turer recently had to recall approximately 8,856 pounds of chicken tamales because they were not pro- duced under a fully-imple- mented HACCP plan. The number of food recalls issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspec- tion Service increased in 2014 over the prior year; 94 recalls were issued, compared to 75 in 2013. Stericycle Expert Solutions, a waste solutions provider that tracks recalls, reported that in Q4 of 2014, the number of FDA recalls actually declined, but the amount of affected units posted a whopping 142 percent gain over Q3. Clearly, there is work to be done on the food safety front. Enter the FDA's Food Safety Moderniza- tion Act (FSMA), the most significant over- haul of food regulations in seven decades. For the first time, FDA has a legislative mandate to require comprehensive, preventive-based controls across the food supply chain. The FSMA applies not only to food processors but all supply chain players. When FSMA becomes fully implemented, more players in the supply chain will be required to follow stricter rules. One of the biggest changes under FSMA has to do with temperature control during food transport. Temp control takes center stage Many shippers are hoping the FDA will be flexible in its temperature monitoring requirements, based on comments submitted to the FDA. Barbara Rasco, Ph.D., director of the School of Food Science at Washing- ton State University and the University of Idaho, says temperature checking of food while in transit will definitely be stricter. The supply chain doesn't have to wait for the FSMA rules to be finalized to do its part to improve food safety. One of the best things about the proposed regulations is that they do not mandate a "prescriptive" approach to meeting safety goals. Jorge Hernandez, US Foods senior vice president for food safety and quality assurance, says companies can look to food safety and quality pro- grams that make sense for their business and then get their business and programs certified by an independent company. In researching this month's article on trace- ability, Food Logistics uncovered numerous tools to improve temperature and quality monitoring. Temperature monitors use a vari- ety of methods for downloading data from the Internet, says Jeff Leshuk, vice president of strategic market- ing and business development for food at Sensitech Inc., which makes temperature monitoring systems. These include USB interfaces that connect to a PC; short- and medium-range radio frequency technologies like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and NFC; and long-range RF technologies like cellular and satellite communications. Globe Tracker International recently released a "smart" refrigerated container. The system combines data from the refrigeration unit with data collected from wireless sensors to report condition and security variables from both inside and outside the container. Cooltrax's "Fresh inTransit" monitors Thermo King refrigeration units and tracks the temperature using wireless technology. WAM Technologies LLC, a provider of M2M solutions for remote management of refrigerated, intermodal and other transporta- tion assets, has released a GSM-based track- ing system to monitor and control refriger- ated, on-board containers. The traceability article on page 22 in this issue of Food Logistics describes both tempera- ture and humidity monitoring solutions from companies such as Carlisle Technologies, Infratab, LINKFRESH, Dynamic Systems Inc., Park City Group, AFS Technologies, Redline Solutions, Roambee, PakSense and Onset. In order to balance state-of-the-art capa- bilities with economic realities, supply chain players have to develop long-range invest- ment plans and partner with supply chain experts. But it's an exciting time to be part of the global food supply chain. ◆ Globalization Keeps Raising The Bar On Safety In Our Supply Chain M A R A S

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Food Logistics - MAR 2015