• Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Supplier Directory
  • SCB YouTube
  • About Us
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Logout
  • My Profile
  • LOGISTICS
    • Air Cargo
    • All Logistics
    • Facility Location Planning
    • Freight Forwarding/Customs Brokerage
    • Global Gateways
    • Global Logistics
    • Last Mile Delivery
    • Logistics Outsourcing
    • LTL/Truckload Services
    • Ocean Transportation
    • Parcel & Express
    • Rail & Intermodal
    • Reverse Logistics
    • Service Parts Management
    • Transportation & Distribution
  • TECHNOLOGY
    • All Technology
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cloud & On-Demand Systems
    • Data Management (Big Data/IoT/Blockchain)
    • ERP & Enterprise Systems
    • Forecasting & Demand Planning
    • Global Trade Management
    • Inventory Planning/ Optimization
    • Product Lifecycle Management
    • Robotics
    • Sales & Operations Planning
    • SC Finance & Revenue Management
    • SC Planning & Optimization
    • Supply Chain Visibility
    • Transportation Management
  • GENERAL SCM
    • Business Strategy Alignment
    • Customer Relationship Management
    • Education & Professional Development
    • Global Supply Chain Management
    • Global Trade & Economics
    • Green Energy
    • HR & Labor Management
    • Quality & Metrics
    • Regulation & Compliance
    • Sourcing/Procurement/SRM
    • SC Security & Risk Mgmt
    • Supply Chains in Crisis
    • Sustainability & Corporate Social Responsibility
  • WAREHOUSING
    • All Warehouse Services
    • Conveyors & Sortation
    • Lift Trucks & AGVs
    • Order Management & Fulfillment
    • Packaging
    • RFID, Barcode, Mobility & Voice
    • Warehouse Automation
    • Warehouse Management Systems
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Aerospace & Defense
    • Apparel
    • Automotive
    • Chemicals & Energy
    • Consumer Packaged Goods
    • E-Commerce/Omni-Channel
    • Food & Beverage
    • Healthcare
    • High-Tech/Electronics
    • Industrial Manufacturing
    • Pharmaceutical/Biotech
    • Retail
  • THINK TANK
  • WEBINARS
    • On-Demand Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCASTS
  • WHITEPAPERS
  • VIDEOS
Home » What’s Hindering Efforts to Fight Global Food Fraud?
SCB FEATURE

What’s Hindering Efforts to Fight Global Food Fraud?

An aerial view of healthy foods can be seen in front of a white background. Photo: iStock.com/bit245

Photo: iStock.com/bit245

November 20, 2023
Robert J. Bowman, SupplyChainBrain

Considering the huge cost of food fraud in global supply chains, it might come as a shock to consumers to learn how weak are the current efforts to put a stop to it.

By some estimates, food fraud and mislabeling affect 1% of global trade, at a cost of $49 billion annually. Worldwide, some 600 million people fall ill to contaminated food each year, according to the Global Food Safety Initiative.

The problem is as old as food supply chains themselves, but in recent years, it’s been made worse by a shift in supply to unprotected markets, economic turmoil, and the rise of e-commerce, which allows sellers to shield their identity.

In many cases, it’s impossible to identify the ultimate source of food or the methods used to produce it, says Ram Ben Tzion, co-founder and chief executive officer of Publican, a digital vetting platform. And that opens the door to both fraud and quality issues.

The resulting public safety crisis “is beyond the ability of regulators and government to monitor,” Ben Tzion says. 

Mislabeling and misclassifying are rampant among fraudsters who seek to bypass regulations, inspections, quality checks and the payment of appropriate duties. Manufacturers might also seek to disguise their true identity if the product comes from a country that uses slave or forced labor.

Many instances of mislabeling involve the use of banned pesticides, in an attempt to boost yields. Ecuador, a major producer of bananas, has seen extensive use of pesticides on international shipments, Ben Tzion says. Also of recent concern are raspberries contaminated with hepatis, resulting in a ban on shipments to the European Union.

A popular variant of modern-day food fraud is what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration refers to as economically motivated alteration, or EMA. It occurs “when someone intentionally leaves out, takes out or substitutes a valuable ingredient or part of a food.”

EMA also happens “when someone adds a substance to a food to make it appear better, or of greater value,” FDA says. Examples include diluting expensive olive oil with cheaper vegetable oil, mixing cheaper sweeteners into pure honey or maple syrup, bulking up expensive spices with non-spice plant material, swapping out expensive fish for less expensive species, and watering down juices sold as containing “100%” fruit juice.

The U.S., at least, doesn’t lack for laws and regulations for ensuring the quality and purity of food. They include the Food Safety Modernization Act, Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, and a host of labeling regulations. But in the absence of strong oversight of labeling and product origin, those measures can only do so much to protect consumers. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 48 million people in the U.S. alone fall ill, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3,000 die each year from foodborne diseases.

The key to smoking out food fraud is access to data, Ben Tzion says. Manufacturers must be held to strict reporting and quality standards on an ongoing basis. “Without a continuous mechanism to check [food quality], you end up eating something very bad.”

The trick, he adds, lies in being able to aggregate information coming from multiple sources, then pull the desired data on demand to assess the quality and provenance of each individual shipment by manufacturer. 

Certain anomalies can set off alarms if sufficient information is available to trigger them in something approaching real time. Buyers can detect problems by running through combinations of suspect origin, manufacturer and the product itself. Suppliers can be checked against databases that are routinely updated by government action. The EU, for example, might issue a new warning on a specific product, which impacts the entire network and the data that accompanies it.

The practice is similar to that which identifies illegal recipients of high-tech exports, Ben Tzion says. “You have the ability to pull data from multiple disparate sources on demand, then check whether the picture is normal or abnormal.” The same routine can be applied to medicine, food or a wide range of commodities.

Modern-day technology provides the ability to access data in multiple forms, reaching beyond the U.S. and Europe to problematic countries such as Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ecuador. And artificial intelligence is in the early stages of being able to detect issues, based on sifting through millions of pieces of data.

When it comes to actual deployment by global food traders, however, these techniques and technologies remain in their infancy. Many supply chains still consist of “black holes” of information that frustrate the ability of regulators and businesses to safeguard the food supply chain. A lack of global standards among trading countries also serves as an inhibitor to total visibility and quality assurance. “That will take an agreement from all governments worldwide,” Ben Tzion says.

Still, he sees progress toward securing the food supply chain and attacking the scourge of food fraud. “What we have now is better visibility and an understanding of the problem, both in public opinion and along the supply chain. As technology becomes more widely used, we will start asking the question.

“The outlook for the future of food quality and safety is better than it was,” Ben Tzion says.

    RELATED CONTENT

    RELATED VIDEOS

    Artificial Intelligence Supply Chain Visibility Quality & Metrics Regulation & Compliance Sourcing/Procurement/SRM Supply Chain Security & Risk Mgmt Food & Beverage
    • Related Articles

      The Fight Against Food Fraud in Our 'Biggest, Weirdest Supply Chains'

      Ukraine’s Farmers Fight to Stave Off Global Food Crisis

      Grocery Manufacturers, A.T. Kearney Recommend Steps to Fight High Cost of Product Fraud

    Robert J. Bowman, SupplyChainBrain

    A Call for Reinvigorating the U.S. as the World’s ‘Manufacturing Superpower’

    More from this author

    Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter!

    Timely, incisive articles delivered directly to your inbox.

    Popular Stories

    • A PARTIALLY OPEN AIRCRAFT MANUFACTURING HANGAR SPORTS HUGE IMAGES OF PLANES ON ITS SLIDING DOORS

      Boeing Dismantles DEI Team as Pressure Builds on New CEO

      Air Cargo
    • A CLOSE-UP OF VARIOUS PILLS ON A MAGENTA TABLE.

      U.S. More Susceptible to Drug Shortages Than Canada

      Global Supply Chain Management
    • A large blue container ship docked at a port, below three white shipping cranes, while a grey barge moves through the waterway in the foreground

      Montréal Employers Threaten to Suspend Striking Port Workers’ Salary Guarantee

      Global Gateways
    • A WOMAN OF COLOR IN BLUE OVERALLS HOLDS A WELDING TORCH IN A FACTORY SETTING

      A Call for Reinvigorating the U.S. as the World’s ‘Manufacturing Superpower’

      Regulation & Compliance
    • An above view of crates of red apples stacked on top of each other, next to a man in a plaid shirt and a white hard hat looking at a tablet.

      The Fight Against Food Fraud in Our 'Biggest, Weirdest Supply Chains'

      Global Supply Chain Management

    Digital Edition

    Cover nov 24 scb q4 2024

    Supply Chain Innovation 2024: A Formula for Thriving in the Age of Disruption

    VIEW THE LATEST ISSUE

    Case Studies

    • Recycled Tagging Fasteners: Small Changes Make a Big Impact

    • A GRAPHIC SHOWING MULTIPLE FORMS OF SHIPPING, WITH A HUMAN STANDING AT THE CENTER, TOUCHING A SYMBOLIC MAP OF THE WORLD

      Enhancing High-Value Electronics Shipment Security with Tive's Real-Time Tracking

    • A GRAPHIC OF INTERLACING HONEYCOMBED ELEMENTS REPRESENTING GLOBAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

      Moving Robots Site-to-Site

    • JLL Finds Perfect Warehouse Location, Leading to $15M Grant for Startup

    • Robots Speed Fulfillment to Help Apparel Company Scale for Growth

    Visit Our Sponsors

    AutoStore Beumer Group Brightdrop
    CHEP Cleo Coenterprise
    Comarch Commport Cycle Labs
    Dassault Descartes Enveyo
    Eva Air Exiger ForwardX Robotics
    Frayt Generix Georgetown University
    GEP Holman Logistics iGPS
    Integrity Staffing JLL Kinaxis
    Korber LoadSmart Lucas Systems
    Manhattan Associates Netstock OWD
    Old Dominion Ortec PartnerLinQ (Visionet)
    Plante Moran Quickbase RapidRatings
    Rockwell Automation SAP S&P Global Mobility
    TADA Tecsys Zebra Technologies
    • More From SCB
      • Featured Content
      • Video Library
      • Think Tank Blog
      • SupplyChainBrain Podcast
      • Whitepapers
      • On-Demand Webinars
      • Upcoming Webinars
    • Digital Offerings
      • Digital Issue
      • Subscribe
      • Manage Your Subscription
      • Newsletters
    • Resources
      • Events Calendar
      • SCB's Great Supply Chain Partners
      • Supplier Directory
      • Case Study Showcase
      • Supply Chain Innovation Awards
      • 100 Great Partners Form
    • SCB Corporate
      • Advertise on SCB.COM
      • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Contact Us
      • Data Sharing Opt-Out

    All content copyright ©2024 Keller International Publishing Corp All rights reserved. No reproduction, transmission or display is permitted without the written permissions of Keller International Publishing Corp

    Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing