Special Editorial Feature – Global Food Fraud and Safety

21 Apr 2014
Lois Manton-O'Byrne, PhD
Executive Editor

Editorial article

SelectScience has today launched a Special Editorial Feature about the global issue of Food fraud and Safety. Featuring interviews and opinion from the world’s leading food scientists, this exclusive two-month report discusses the role of science in ensuring future food integrity.

In recent years, news headlines from around the world have been full of scandals involving food adulteration and contamination. Food fraud is demonstrating itself as an emerging risk given the increasingly global and complex nature of food supply chains. Recent stories such as the European horsemeat scandal, the Chinese milk crisis and the US honey laundering story have brought this issue to the forefront of consumers’ minds.

Professor Chris Elliott, Director of the Institute for Global Food Safety, Queen’s University Belfast said: “In the UK we import over 50% of our food, while in the United States the fish they eat comes from international imports, so it is truly global. With these global supply chains there is more opportunity for contamination, and more opportunity for food fraud.”

The Global Response to Food Crime
One of the greatest problems facing food forensics is that consumers can't always tell when they're being defrauded. The scientific community is leading the fight in making sure that the public have confidence in what they are eating.

John Spink, Director and Assistant Professor, Food Fraud Initiative, Michigan State University commented: “The response to prevent food fraud really does need to be global, and it really does need to be through a law enforcing type agency.”

Economically Motivated Food Adulteration
As well as food supply globalization making detection harder and adulteration easier, the rise in food costs has led to an increased temptation to commit food fraud to keep prices down, even at the cost of safety and integrity.

Dr. Junshi Chen, Senior Advisor to the China National Center for Food Safety Risk Assessment, said: “The food business is trying to make more money from food products, so there is a trend of a very common practice that’s called food fraud, or in China, food adulteration. That means to add something into food for economic purposes. Melamine in milk is one of these well known cases.”

Throughout the next eight weeks, SelectScience will be interviewing experts from around the globe, investigating the current issues and testing methods, the problems facing the food supply chain and what needs to happen in the future.

Come back each week and watch the videos to see what new techniques and methods leading food scientists from around the world are using to detect food adulteration.

Visit the SelectScience Food Fraud Special Feature >>

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Food and Beverage AnalyzersFood and Beverage Analyzers are commonly used to provide information about the chemical composition, structure and physical properties of food materials.Food SafetyFood safety describes the prevention of food-borne illnesses. Contamination with a variety of pathogens can be prevented with adequate temperature control, hygiene and labeling. Food samples can be tested using GC/MS, HPLC, SPE, and qPCR to ensure their adherence to regulations.Food AuthenticationFood authentication ensures that food products are accurately labeled and free from adulteration or misrepresentation. This is important for consumer safety, quality control, and regulatory compliance. Explore food authentication tools in our peer-reviewed product directory; compare products, check reviews, and get pricing directly from manufacturers.Food TestingFood testing refers to a variety experiments including PCR, mass spectrometry, processing, QuEChERS, analyzing and Kjeldahl.Food ContaminationFood contamination refers to the presence of harmful substances or pathogens in food, posing risks to human health. Contaminants can be biological, chemical, or physical, and their detection is crucial for ensuring food safety. Advanced testing methods like PCR, chromatography, and spectroscopy are used to identify contaminants in food products. Browse our peer-reviewed product directory to find the best solutions for food contamination detection, compare products, check reviews, and get pricing directly from manufacturers.Food FraudFood adulteration refers to food when it has been has been altered unlawfully with the addition of another lower commodity food product to increase quantity. The 2013 European horsemeat scandal saw the adulteration of beef products with the addition of horse meat.MilkMilk is a dairy product that contains lactose. It is consumed by infant mammals to provide nutrients from the mother. In 2008, the Chinese milk scandal saw the unlawful adulteration of powdered milk with melamine.
Special Editorial Feature – Global Food Fraud and Safety