TY - JOUR
T1 - The case for UHF RFID application in the meat supply chain in the Irish context
T2 - A review perspective
AU - Mc Carthy, Ultan
AU - Ayalew, Gashaw
AU - Butler, Francis
AU - McDonnell, Kevin
AU - Ward, Shane
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - As a result of recent food scares, increasing pressure has been placed on food producing industries to incorporate a farm-to-fork traceability system. Conventional methods of traceability while reasonably successful are not without their disadvantages. These include potential damage and limited data capacity in the case of bar codes, unacceptable delays incurred through the use of DNA sampling and finally inapplicability of on biometric technologies due to permanent detachment post mortem. The aim of this paper is to assert the case for the widespread adoption of RFID in the farm-to-fork traceability of meat, all based on the Irish system. The arguments would be valid to any country or geographic region, with the existing differences taken into account. RFID technologies offer, among others, solutions to the most important challenges to barcode technology, amenity to automation, possibility of value-added products or processes, possibility for condition monitoring during storage and transport, potential to in-house traceability under adverse processing environments, seamless integration with global supply chain, item-level traceability, and all these in near real-time.
AB - As a result of recent food scares, increasing pressure has been placed on food producing industries to incorporate a farm-to-fork traceability system. Conventional methods of traceability while reasonably successful are not without their disadvantages. These include potential damage and limited data capacity in the case of bar codes, unacceptable delays incurred through the use of DNA sampling and finally inapplicability of on biometric technologies due to permanent detachment post mortem. The aim of this paper is to assert the case for the widespread adoption of RFID in the farm-to-fork traceability of meat, all based on the Irish system. The arguments would be valid to any country or geographic region, with the existing differences taken into account. RFID technologies offer, among others, solutions to the most important challenges to barcode technology, amenity to automation, possibility of value-added products or processes, possibility for condition monitoring during storage and transport, potential to in-house traceability under adverse processing environments, seamless integration with global supply chain, item-level traceability, and all these in near real-time.
KW - Electronic food traceability
KW - Food supply chain management
KW - Traceability
KW - UHF RFID
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84877835906&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84877835906
VL - 13
JO - Agricultural Engineering International: CIGR Journal
JF - Agricultural Engineering International: CIGR Journal
SN - 1682-1130
IS - 3
ER -