Making data accessible and qualified, a necessity
Next, Connecting Food can take over to collect, verify, and standardize data from different sources, including AgTech solutions like xFarm, to make them exploitable. With their expertise, they trace data through different processing stages. The data management platform has chosen two technologies to support its solution: blockchain to notarize data, make it tamper-proof, and digital twins (digital representation of a physical reality) allowing the modeling of processes, flows, and risk management to better anticipate hazards on the value chain.
In other words, as Connecting Food's founder, Stefano Volpi, reminds us, "Once the data is recorded and notarized in the blockchain, I can share it with clients, institutions, or consumers." This technological choice proves ideal for offering precision, simplicity, and interoperability to agricultural stakeholders in the collection and processing of their data.
Optimized and Shared Agricultural Data
Finally, as Stefano Volpi, co-founder of Connecting Food, points out, "once mapped and traced, I can share this certified information internally or with our clients' teams to make their systems more efficient, smoother, to save time and be more precise. It is also possible to share this same information externally to create business and value."
The Barilla Case - Pesto alla Genovese
The industrial giant has therefore chosen, to embark on traceability, one of its iconic recipes based on simple ingredients but with strict specifications in terms of freshness and quality: Pesto alla Genovese. With this project Barilla is pursuing a double objective: digitalize its supply chain and optimize its processes while strengthening its relationship with consumers.
With this system, the industrialist can ensure real-time traceability at the batch level, anticipate any problems concerning its raw materials (batch recalls, digital audits of specifications, certification management, etc.), and identify any discrepancies between suppliers and different protocols and certificates.
Once structured and cleaned, Barilla can share this information with consumers directly from the packaging. The consumer simply has to scan the QR code on the packaging, enter the lot number to access the web app, which gives them access to augmented and targeted information about the product. They can then find all the information about the product lot by lot (origin, harvest date, CSR commitment, dynamic map of the different actors, etc.).
After a year of collaboration, Barilla and Connecting Food have achieved their set objectives of digitalizing and optimizing processes and strengthening the link with the consumer. With these foundations laid, an expansion to other ingredients and products, in an extended geographical scope, is planned for the future.