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Wednesday, 1 March 2017

Bird flu blamed as chicken company sees sales fall

French chicken producer Duc saw turnover decline last year as the French avian influenza (AI) battle saw the company shut out of key export markets, China and South Africa.



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G.F.S.I. publishes updated food safety requirements

New to the requirements include a focus on food fraud and transparency

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The big picture behind food safety

The safety of food and beverage products is directly linked to consumer trust

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Pre-printed cartons vs carton print & apply: which is better?

Q. We've always used pre-printed cartons…

A. Manufacturers have long relied on pre-printed cartons or shippers for packing and shipping product, but this limits the flexibility. Information can’t be updated quickly, and there’s risk of wasted inventory if cartons need to be updated at short notice. And if you discontinue a product or change information? Then the cartons, plus time and money in creating them, are scrapped.

Q. So what are the advantages of inline coding and labelling?

A. The main one is being able to use generic boxes rather than brand or product-specific packaging. This saves money tied up in inventory and physical storage. Direct coding or print-and-apply labelling with an LPA is a highly cost-effective solution, particularly if you produce a range of SKUs or will expand your range.

Q. Is inline coding high quality?

A. Today’s inline carton coders and LPAs print high resolution, high quality information at high speeds on secondary packaging, including corrugated boxes, trays, SPRs etc.

Q. What can inline coding print?

A. Both variable and static information simultaneously: barcodes, graphics, large and small text, logos, 2D codes and linear 1D codes. You can reduce (or eliminate) pre-printed carton numbers, simply using one plain carton type in various sizes.

Q. Any other benefits?

A. There are many! Manufacturers will save space (in inventory and the printers’ small production-line footprint). You gain flexibility (less forward planning than pre-printed cartons, reducing operations and planning complexity; output is based on product not packaging availability, maximising your plant’s operational flexibility). Changeover time is reduced (great for smaller and contract manufacturers who change products/packaging multiple times daily). You can fully integrate inline coding and other technologies on a production line, managing them from a single centralised controller, improving line efficiency.

Q. Who do pre-printed cartons suit then?

A. They’re a viable option for many manufacturers. Some choose both. Manufacturers can pre-print cartons with just branding, while all other information is coded or labelled on the production line.



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Russian firm ramps up self-reliance in chicken flocks

Cherkizovo has commissioned its first farm for parent chicken flocks in Russia and hopes to finish construction of three more farms in autumn 2017, in order to cut its dependence on imported materials. 



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US pork company breaks the ice with frozen product launch

Virginia-based Smithfield has added six products to its frozen meat products portfolio with the launch of fully cooked sausages and microwaveable sandwiches. 



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Tuesday, 28 February 2017

New CEO for FSANZ

The board of Food Standards Australia and New Zealand (FSANZ) has appointed Mark Booth its new CEO. Mark will replace Steve McCutcheon who left at the end of January after 10 years in the position.

The CEO is responsible for the day-to-day administration of FSANZ and the control of its operations.

With extensive experience and knowledge of the Australian and New Zealand health systems, a strong policy background and detailed experience in health at the government level, Mark is expected to lead FSANZ “at a time when food standards and food safety require greater scrutiny, rigour and bi-national cooperation than ever”, said the Hon Dr David Gillespie, MP, Assistant Minister for Health in announcing the appointment.



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