The pandemic’s disruption has been felt everywhere: from global supply chain disruption, to working from home, to mask mandates, COVID-19’s impact spread to every corner of the globe. One industry that was particularly hit hard was the food and beverage industry.
Consumer buying patterns changed making demand planning incredibly difficult, while some products experienced unforeseen shortages or surpluses. Businesses had to adapt to growing carrier pricing changes and volume restrictions and limitations, while some were forced to quickly develop omnichannel shopping experiences and multi-vendor strategies.
Read: Automation In Lab-Grown Meat Could Strongly Impact The Food Industry
And now, as we begin to open up the country, analysts expect a surge in recalls. While food recall activity from the FDA decreased 4.3 percent in Q1 2021 over Q4 2020 , it actually increased 31.9 percent in units impacted quarter-over-quarter.
Experts predict the food & beverage industry will see new food safety rules, increased oversight, enforcement activities, and more lawsuits as it emerges from the pandemic.
New priorities in FDA inspections are likely, including expanded oversight related to contaminants. Indeed, as the world at large returns to “normal,” the way companies conduct business will never be the same.
How Is The Food & Beverage Industry Adjusting?
As we begin to consider our next pivot from strained supply and fluctuating consumer demand, one factor remains the same: technology has become indispensable in finding modern solutions to modern problems.
A return to normalcy does not include a return to slow adoption of technology. Procrastination is simply no longer an option. That genie cannot be put back its bottle, and really, why would you want to?
Consumers have grown accustomed to mobile shopping and contactless pickup — nearly three-quarters of small and medium businesses expect consumers to continue to prefer contactless payments. Only 16 percent of consumers say they plan to revert to their old methods of payments, post-pandemic.
In other words, though the weather may be changing, the landscape is not.
Technology That Prioritizes Agility and Resilience
If 2020 taught food & beverage companies anything, it was to prioritize agility and resilience. You never know when the mother of all monkey wrenches is about to wreck all your best-laid plans.
The cloud was clearly one of the most important technologies to save the day last year, and it will continue to lead the way for the foreseeable future.
Read: IBM 5 in 5 Campaign Will Bring Blockchain and AI to Food Industry
The pandemic accelerated the use of smart sensors to collect data from factory equipment. The industrial internet of things (IIoT) makes possible the agility necessary to react in real-time, connect from anywhere across the globe, and scale with impossibly large operations.
IT teams use the cloud to facilitate communications between disparate systems and to make digital transformations easier. Now vast data lakes have become manageable, allowing predictive analytics, preventative maintenance, and prioritization planning.
These newfound opportunities will only gain traction as the world moves forward.
Technologies such as a material ledger present a novel approach to intelligent tracking of material and energy movements and transformations, their associated monetary value, process data, and quality data.
With the anticipated focus on contamination, a material ledger is invaluable in identifying possible sources of contamination and providing a clear indication of how big a recall should be.
This technology also makes possible root cause analyses that identify correlations between incoming materials, performed process steps, and environmental conditions and the resulting quality of products produced.
As artificial intelligence (AI) continues to gain momentum and reach new capabilities through 2021, companies will gain the ability to better predict consumer behavior and adjust.
Read: EU Publishes Framework for Artificial Intelligence Regulation
Cutting-edge analytics derived from material traceability and smart manufacturing powered by AI and machine learning (ML) will bring companies closer to meeting their sustainability and resilience goals.
And these technologies have already proved to increase yield, quality, safety, compliance, and brand confidence, while reducing waste and environmental impact.
Other technologies such as 3-D printed food are on the horizon (a market composed of 293,000 industrial robots and expected to reach nearly $3.5 billion by 2027 but the onus is on the supply chain to keep pace, meet the needs of the market, and survive all obstacles big and small using the revolutionary data technology that continues to make strides to meet the needs of the future.
If you enjoyed this article and want to receive more valuable industry content like this, click here to sign up for our digital newsletters!
Leave a Reply