A mobile ingredient-tracing system proposed to fight food fraud – AGDAILY

The public wants to know about their food more than ever, and with a growing middle class globally and production efficiencies easing the costs of many items, more and more people are able to make food decisions based on where their food comes and other preferences that they choose to embrace. Were seeing this everywhere from farmers markets to traditional grocery stores to big-box retailers. Thats why researchers at the University of Tokyo have proposed a prototype app aimed at providing full transparency from farm to table along supply chains.

The hope with this app would be to meet the needs of small farmers, larger-scale growers, and boutique producers.

While official food certification systems exist in many countries, experts say the financial cost of implementation and the labor costs of maintenance are impractical for many farmers on the smaller-scale side. Existing certifications systems can also be exploited by unscrupulous sellers who fake certificates or logos of authenticity for premium products, like Japanese Wagyu beef and Italian Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, or for environmentally ethical products, like dolphin-safe tuna.

Our motivation was to design a food tracking system that is cheap for smallholder farmers, convenient for consumers, and can prevent food fraud, said Kaiyuan Lin, a third-year doctoral student at the University of Tokyo and first author of the research study published in Nature Food.

The research teams food tracking system begins with the harvest of any ingredient, for example, rice on a family farm. The farmer opens the app on a mobile phone, enters details about the amount and type of rice, then creates and prints a QR code to attach to the bags of rice. A truck driver then scans the QR code and enters details into the app about where, when, and how the rice was transported to the market. A market vendor buys the rice, scans the QR code to register that the rice is now in their possession, and enters details about where and how the rice is stored before resale. Eventually, the vendor might sell some rice directly to consumers or other manufacturers who can scan the QR code and know where the rice originated.

My mission is to make sure the system is not lying to you. Data are recorded in our digital system only when transactions happen person-to-person in the real, physical world, so there can be no fraud, said Lin.

If an imposter registered counterfeit QR codes to dupe consumers, farmers would notice that their alleged harvest size suddenly duplicated itself in the app. Farmers can also choose to receive updates from the app about where, when, and in what form their harvest eventually reaches consumers.

We think tracking their ingredients will appeal to farmers sense of craftsmanship and pride in their work, said Lin.

The app can also turn a long list of ingredients into a single QR code. For example, a factory chef might buy rice from Taiwan, Kampot pepper from Cambodia, and Kobe beef from Japanto manufacture into prepared meal kits. Only when physically receiving these ingredients can the factory record to their QR codes. After collecting all of the ingredients codes, the factory then uses the app to create a new QR code to attach to the completed meal kits. The factory can create a unique QR code for each new batch of meal kits every day. When consumers scan a meal kits QR code, they can read details about the kit as well as all of the origin of all the individual ingredients that are digitally connected to the kits QR code.

The app was designed with open-source software and a fully decentralized (peer-to-peer or multi-master) database, meaning that changes are not controlled by a centralized server. Data storage is spread out among every users phone or computer, so there is no central server to hack, providing consumers with even more peace of mind. Researchers hope the decentralized aspect of the app will further contribute to democratizing food systems.

For now, the app remains a hypothetical proposal in need of further financial support to become a reality.

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A mobile ingredient-tracing system proposed to fight food fraud - AGDAILY

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