Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6389933 Food Control 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•SIGMO assesses the likelihood of GMO presence in food and feed products.•The assessment is made using product traceability and analytic data.•The assessment is governed by a hierarchical rule-based multi-attribute model.•SIGMO helps producers and importers to reduce the number of necessary GMO analyses.•SIGMO helps the users to cope with the complexity of GMO market and regulations.

Since their introduction in 1994, more and more genetically modified (GM) crops are grown worldwide and introduced in food or feed products. In the European Union (EU), the production, trade and marketing of GM products is strictly regulated, but the situation is becoming more complex due to the increasing number and complexity of GM crops, and asynchronic approval procedures with the major GM crop producing countries. Importers and traders are obliged to assess their respective supply chains for the potential presence of authorised and unauthorised GM organisms (GMOs), where wrong decisions may lead to substantial economic losses. This article presents a decision support system SIGMO aimed at guiding producers and traders with the assessment of the likelihood that their products may comprise authorised or unauthorised GM materials. The assessment is based on traceability data about the product (nature and origin of the raw materials, transportation aspects), as well as analytical results of the presence of GMOs in the final product or its ingredients. The approach uses a combination of data-driven and model-driven decision support. SIGMO is composed of (1) a data base providing data about GMO crop species produced and approved in counties worldwide, (2) a multi-attribute model for the assessment of GMO presence in food/feed products, and (3) an on-line user interface. SIGMO helps producers and traders to better comply to valid EU GMO regulations and to better control their products and supply chains in terms of the unintended presence of (unauthorised) GMOs in a cost-effective way.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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