Most of the larger grower shippers, particularly of leafy
green products, have adopted PTI. Many of them realize the benefit of case
traceability labeling across all products they ship, while some do case
labeling as an additional process only for retailers or food service customers
that require it. My observation is that many large suppliers were ready,
willing and able to do case labeling years before any retailer ever scanned a
case in the stores.
There are several factors that lead me to believe we will
see regulated case traceability labeling the United States within the next 18
months:
- While FSMA was passed in 2011 and there are now seven Produce and Animal Food regulations in place, the FDA has yet to release the reporting requirements for FSMA
- Canada’s Safe Food for Canadians Regulations went into effect in January of this year; these include case traceability labeling requirements for food products shipped to/from/or between Canadian provinces.
- The FDA spent a significant amount of time reviewing and analyzing what broke down in the traceability of the Romaine Lettuce outbreaks of 2017 and 2018
- Frank Yiannas, who had led the efforts at Walmart to test and implement blockchain technology, became the FDA’s Deputy Commissioner for Food Policy and Response in December of 2018
- Consumer groups are pushing the FDA for traceability
About the author Todd Baggett:
Todd is the President and CEO of RedLine Solutions; a company that provides produce traceability and inventory solutions. He is the author of “Produce Traceability for Dummies”, and has served as the Co-Chair of the PTI Technical Working Group since 2011.
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