As food products travel through the supply chain before reaching consumers’ plates, they face various contamination and health hazards. Luckily, good food safety practices and procedures within manufacturing, packing, and distribution facilities can help prevent these risks and protect consumers.
As a result, it should come as no surprise that experts agree that not only will food companies continue proactively policing themselves beyond regulatory requirements but also that food safety will continue to define the industry in the foreseeable future.
As global markets become increasingly interconnected due to trade and consumer tastes becoming more international, the mass production and distribution of food products are naturally becoming more complex and larger in scale. With globalization not set to slow down anytime soon despite recent trade tensions, tariffs, and pandemic-related supply chain issues, the importance of food safety is becoming even more pronounced.
However, many of these food safety legal requirements set out by countries (such as the FSMA in the U.S. or Regulation (EC) 852 in the European Union) only cover the basics of food safety and do not account for the full spectrum of risks that can be introduced through wide-scale production, distribution, and consumption across multiple countries. In other words, companies looking to stay competitive proactively introduce additional food safety measures and safeguards beyond compliance.
Recent research has highlighted how general consumers are more savvy about food safety issues than ever — survey participants were very concerned about food contamination (46%), foodborne illnesses (45%), and undeclared allergens (39%). Given how social media and 24-hour news cycles can quickly inform and educate the public about recent recalls, it’s not surprising that consumers demand greater food safety from the brands they purchase.
In the face of this heightened consumer awareness, it’s no longer enough for food companies to simply meet regulatory requirements; instead, they need to go above and beyond in prioritizing food safety to reassure discerning consumers. This means companies must take advantage of food safety training, third-party inspections and audits, and up-to-date food industry resources to achieve higher food safety standards throughout their supply chains.
From the direct financial costs to damaged consumer trust, the negative repercussions of a food safety recall can take years for brands to recover from. For smaller food companies, the long-term brand impact can be devastating.
However, the human cost of inadequate food safety should never be overlooked. Each year, 420,000 people die from foodborne illnesses, with small children accounting for more than 40% of this figure. Beyond this immediate human cost, poor food safety has a cascading effect, leading to disease, malnutrition, and a strain on public health services that further inhibit economic and social advancement in developing countries.
As food safety governs how food companies currently conduct product development, manufacturing, and distribution tasks, it’s clear that it will continue defining the food industry in the years to come. However, ensuring that food safety remains a priority at your food company and throughout the food industry requires building food safety culture from the top down. This means training your leadership team and executives in relevant food safety initiatives, processes, and regulations — having food safety champions can have a trickle-down effect throughout your whole organization. Learn more about AIB International’s training programs here.