Title: European Technology Platform FOOD Food for Life
1European Technology Platform FOODFood for Life
- Towards a Common Vision
- Stakeholders Meeting
- Brussels, June 9, 2005
2ETP Food core team
- Mrs. Daniela Israelachwili, CIAA, B
- Dr. Jan Maat Unilever RD Vlaardingen, NL
- Dr. Jacqueline Castenmiller, Wageningen Centre
for Food Sciences, NL - Dr. Fred Beekmans, Wageningen University and
Research Center, NL - Dr. Roger Fenwick, Institute for Food Research,
UK - Mr Daniele Rossi, Federazione Italiana
dellIndustria Alimentare, CIAA, I - Dr. Josef Haber, BASF, D
- Dr. Kerstin Lienemann, German Initiative
Agro-Food-Research, D - Prof. Dr. Gerhard Schiefer, University of Bonn, D
- Prof. Dr. Brigitte Petersen, GIQS, D
- Prof. Dr. Andrzej Babuchovski, University of
Warmia Mazury, PL - Prof. Dr. Tim Hogg, Universidade Catolica
Portuguesa, PT - Prof. Dr. Didier Majou, ACTIA, F
- Prof. Dr. Francisco Tomas-Barberan, CEBAS, E
- Mrs. Marta Betran, CIAA, B
3European Agro-Food Industry
- Largest manufacturing sector in EU (13.6 in
EU15) - Turnover EU25 was 799 billion in 2003 limited
growth _at_ 1.9 - Total exports in 2003 amounted 45 billion with
a positive trade balance of 5.8 billion - Major employer with 4.1 million workers of which
61.3 in SMEs
4Trends in Society Food
- The function of Food is changing
- what we eat caloriesgt experience gt
nutrition health, variety - when we eat regular meals gt grazing
- where we eat in-home gt out-of-home
- with whom we eat social gt individual
- how we prepare our food from scratch gt
ready-to-eat heat eat - A wealth of choice
- primary production year round, global supply
- food industry preserved, frozen, chilled,
freshly prepared - role of retail
- out-of-home
5Trends in the Food Industry
Speed of product innovation (half-life of product
innovation)
2 year
10 year
Process
Product
Nutritional science successfully linked
nutritional habit to health Naturalness
increasingly important in relation to health /
vitality Consumer more quality conscious
CARE
Added Value
SERVICE
MAKE
2015
1970
1980
2000
1990
Foodservice Eating out Snacking
Clean label Milder processing
Improving manufacturing efficiency Batch -
continuous. Reduce waste.
6Trends in Society The other side of the coin
7The DemographicsEmpty-nesters will increase in
the UK
Male
Female
Population (millions)
8Rationale for Healthy Ageing
- Change in population demographics
- Changes in life span
- Over-50s have special needs
- Over-50s have a high degree of interest in body
health appearance
9Healthy Ageing Goal
To influence an individuals state of ageing and
deliver a personal regime of nutrients,
lifestyle and advice for healthy longevity.
Well-Being/ Appearance
Add life to years
Age
10Trends in Society The other side of the coin
- Ageing population
- Changes in lifestyle and dietary patterns have
increased the incidence of chronic
non-communicable diseases incl. - Obesity
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Hypertension
- Diabetes mellitus
- Certain cancers
11Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2002
Source Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
System, CDC
12A vision for improving Population Health
Green MR and van der Ouderaa F, Nature
Pharmacogenomics - 2003
13ETP Food for Life the Vision
- The vision of the ETP on Food for Life is that an
effective integration of strategically-focused,
trans-national, concerted research in the
nutritional sciences, food quality and food
technologies will deliver innovative, novel and
improved food products for, and to, national,
regional and global markets in line with consumer
needs and expectations. - These products, together with recommended changes
in dietary regimes and lifestyles, will have a
positive impact on public health and overall
quality of life (adding life to years). - Such targeted activities will support a
successful and competitive pan-European agro-food
industry having global business leadership
securely based on economic growth, technology
transfer, ecological sustainability and consumer
confidence.
14European Technology Platform Food for Life
15Food Health
- Changes in dietary regimens based on developments
in nutritional sciences and new innovative
product formats, together with concomitant
changes in lifestyle will have a major impact on
improving public health and increasing productive
life - New and effective food-based strategies to
optimise - childrens growth and development,
- lean body mass in adults including prevention of
obesity, - immune, cognitive function in the elderly, and
- healthy gut for improved wellbeing and resistance
to disease. - New and effective food-based strategies for
reducing the risk of diet-related diseases - obesity
- cardio-vascular disease,
- diabetes,
- cancer and
- osteoporosis.
16Food Quality Manufacturing -1-
- Value-added innovative food products will be
manufactured fulfilling consumer requirements for
superior product quality, convenience and
availability - Food Taste
- How to arrive at a drastic reduction in sugar,
fat or salt levels without compromising the taste
(reduce the baddies) - How to arrive at novel, exciting textures
dynamics of structuring and structure breakdown
is the future (includes nanotechnology) - Sensory pleasure for the elderly
- Understanding sensory perception... From the
receptor to the brain... Cross modal
interactions... - Premium taste and innovation on traditional food
- Ethnic integration and industrialisation of
regional gastronomy
17Food Quality Manufacturing -2-
- Food Convenience
- Novel packaging systems adapting to changing
society novel technologies for heat eat
concepts - Food Manufacturing
- Minimally-processed foods maintaining freshness
and shelf life - Flexible processing to comply with personal
demands - Distributed manufacturing systems
18Food Safety, a prerequisite
- To ensure the production of safe foods that
consumers can trust - A systems approach for improved food safety
reduced food spoilage , incl. development of
integrated processing and packaging solutions - Methods of quantitative risk assessment and
predictive modelling of safety and spoilage risks
along the extended supply chain, incl. novel
detection routines - Reliable tracking systems to ensure product
safety guarantee product origin - Foodborne micro-organisms and their
ecophysiology community interactions,
host-microbe and food-microbe interactions,
pathogenicity and virulence mechanisms using
functional genomics - Understanding the consumer perception of food
safety more fully - Reduction and eventual elimination of animal
testing
19Sustainable Food Production
- Creating a greater synergy between economic
growth, social equity and environmental
protection (following the Environmental
Technologies Action Plan) - Full Life Cycle Analysis of food chains
prioritising issues preventing sustainability - New modelling tools to assess key economic,
social and environmental factors of
sustainability identification of influencing
factors - New farming technologies across a diversity of
farm management systems - Knowledge management, identification and
involvement of stakeholders, support in
implementation ( New Member States in particular)
20Food Chain Management
- Achieving a competitive, high level of food chain
performance through implementation of new
technologies and business practices that address
all aspects of economic efficiency, marketing and
environmental control - Technical sciences early and effective
implementation of new generation of information-
and communication technologies within the
agro-food sector and adoption of new generation
tools relating to production-, trade-, retail-
and consumer issues. - Business administration business organisation,
quality-, risk- and innovation management to
co-ordinate intra- and inter-organisational
relationships, marketing aspects. - Social Sciences social aspects of transnational
networking activity, communication and
organisation within value added chains,
supporting for complex problem solving in
scientific, societal, agro-food industrial and
business environments.
21Food Consumer
- How to make the Healthy Choice the Easy Choice?
- How to create and promote trust and confidence in
food production and consumption - Understanding and predicting the selection and
sustained acceptance of healthy foods, including
stimulating habitual consumption - Designing and testing of new ways to effectively
communicate nutritional values to various
population groups
22Communication, Training Technology Transfer
23Horizontal Issues
- Clustering Networking
- build network with health technology sectors
- optimise clustering in the knowledge / innovation
chain - Education Training
- availability and mobility of qualified and
skilled labour force - Access to (Venture) Capital
- relevant for start-ups and SMEs
- Interaction with Health Insurance Companies
24ETP Food organisation
25ETP Food Food for Life
- The vision
- The vision of the ETP on Food for Life is that an
effective integration of strategically-focused,
trans-national, concerted research in the
nutritional sciences, food quality and food
technologies will deliver innovative, novel and
improved food products for, and to, national,
regional and global markets in line with consumer
needs and expectations. These products, together
with recommended changes in dietary regimes and
lifestyles, will have a positive impact on public
health and overall quality of life (adding life
to years). - Such targeted activities will support a
successful and competitive pan-European agro-food
industry having global business leadership
securely based on economic growth, technology
transfer, ecological sustainability and consumer
confidence. - Effective public-private partnerships will be
essential to fulfil this vision
26The Industrial Innovation Chain
5 - 10 yr
4 - 8 yr
2 - 5 yr
0,5 - 3 yr
Applied Sciences
Technology- application
Product Development
Fundamental Sciences
Universities, various
Public/private Techno- logical Top Institutes,
Research Contract Org.
Company Research
Company Development
Pre-competitive
27Yes to ETP Food because it will
- Drive European competitiveness based on the FD
sector sheer size and the transition foreseen to
high value added product portfolio (incl.
services) with a major impact on well-being and
welfare - Positively impact on Community policies
(integration research, aim to reach higher RD
expenditure, involvement SMEs) - Boost research performance to effect the
transition to high added-value products - Sustain career-development in food RD in Europe
and promote entrepreneurial activity - Prevent fragmentation by creating a shared Common
Vision and managing an effective implementation
plan for a Strategic Research Agenda