Although the term “AI” usually reminds us of futuristic scenarios made popular by science fiction, the use of robotic function in food service surprisingly commenced more than a hundred years ago when vending machines first appeared in 1897. We’re now starting to see a significant acceleration in food service automation like never before. New technologies are transforming the way restaurants, food processors, and food distributors are providing food to their customers, specifically in activities that require speed, consistency, repetition, and sanitary controls.
New entrepreneurial companies are patenting machines that do everything from cooking and serving meals to packaging, inventory management, and deliver services. Here are some new AI applications recently making the news:
The Benefits of AI to the Food Industry
Pioneering food companies are looking for alternatives to the traditional ways of producing and serving food for many good reasons:
In general, a shift to automated supply chain and service solutions increases profitability by optimizing efficiencies to lower costs and bring in higher revenues. Food industry leaders are hopeful that AI will improve food quality and consistency, worker productivity and safety, inventory management, and customer service.
For example, it is estimated that robots can improve yields significantly where precise cuts of meat and produce make the difference. Robots can also work in harsh environments such as sub-zero freezers, and handle dangerous equipment, thus relieving workers of potential injury. Robots don’t complain about endlessly repetitive tasks, allowing employees to train for more skilled responsibilities. They can lift heavy packages 24 hours a day without fear of back pain. Robots, in short, never get tired or sick, are never absent, are strong, dependable, and always obedient.
Robots are also sterile. That’s a huge benefit. It’s hard to overestimate how much AI solutions can help stem the rising tide of foodborne illness. Not only has FSMA raised the bar on sanitary requirements along the entire supply chain, but pathogens are now finding their way into foods not typically prone to contamination, such as spices, cereals, and other non-refrigerated packaged foods.
Robots could radically reduce the risk of food recalls, since they can eliminate the opportunity for human workers to unwittingly transfer diseases through manual food handling. Not to mention that they’re easy to clean. In fact, Technavio predicts robot use in the food industry will grow almost 30% by 2019, driven by demands for contamination-free production areas.
Beyond the use of robots to replace human workers at critical points in the supply chain most prone to contamination, food companies and regulatory agencies may soon take advantage of two promising technologies that could vastly reduce foodborne illness outbreaks:
This is the beginning of a new era. Although critics of AI make good points about some of its potential drawbacks, such as creating a new class of unemployed workers, when it comes to food safety and protection of consumers, the advantages are clear.
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