In 2021, the Biden administration unveiled Executive Order 14017, formalizing plans to improve American supply chain resilience through strategic trade partnerships (often referred to as “friendshoring”). The order identified around 2,400 critical goods and materials — including agricultural and food items necessary for public health — and outlined strategies for moving away from dependence on potentially adversarial states and toward trade with politically friendlier suppliers.
Like the reshoring and nearshoring movements, friendshoring has the potential to reshape the entire supply chain — including the food and beverage sector. In addition to dramatically altering supplier dynamics within the industry, these changes could have significant reverberations for food safety for years to come.
Friendshoring — not to be confused with nearshoring or reshoring — is a supply chain strategy of moving manufacturing away from potentially risky states and toward more politically allied nations.
The goal is to prevent potentially hostile countries from developing market advantages they could use to disrupt the U.S. economy in critical sectors like rare earth minerals, energy, technology — and, of course, food and agriculture.
Strategically, friendshoring differs from nearshoring in that it prioritizes moving supply chains to allied countries without concern for geographical proximity. It’s also drastically different from reshoring in that supply chains require international trade rather than just domestic production. It’s unclear how much current and future federal policies will impact supply chain management for industry stakeholders.
Many allied nations included in friendshoring schemes (like Mexico and Canada are in the U.S.) overlap with destinations for nearshoring strategies. But other friendly countries like Australia, Japan, India, and Vietnam have no geographic proximity to the U.S. Since the metrics for friendshoring success are so removed from normal business processes, the strategy can be a bit of a wildcard when it comes to impact on food safety:
Friendshoring is just one aspect of supply chain management with the potential to impact food safety — and the landscape is evolving at a faster rate than ever. Having expert third-party guidance on the latest trends and emerging best practices is critical to mitigating risks before they create issues. That’s where AIB International comes in.
Whether you’re looking for in-depth training for your frontline staff and leadership, expert audits to evaluate food safety programs, or food safety certifications, the team at AIB International has offerings to help you meet every challenge. Sign up for the newsletter to stay up to date.