Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Distribution

Frozen food stock approaches end of shelf-life

It has produced a guide advising a range of actions.  These include extending the ‘best before’ date; continuing to accept product beyond the ‘best before’ date; agreeing a price reduction with costs shared fairly between parties; disposing food through redistribution to organisations such as charities. 

The call comes as the British Meat Processors Association (BMPA) announced it was working to convince the Food Standards Agency (FSA) to support extending chilled red meat shelf-life guidance beyond the ten-day rule​. 

In June, wholesalers called for food manufacturers and the Government to help move ambient and frozen stock out of their warehouses​ as the foodservice sector prepared to reopen on 4 July.

Range of options

The BFFF is calling for all options to be considered, as the processes manufacturers, suppliers and wholesalers commonly use to agree shelf-life extensions may be impractical given the amount of frozen food in storage. 

The new guidance includes detailed advice on shelf-life extension and labelling and redistribution. It was produced in collaboration with the Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA), Primary Authority and charity WRAP. It is backed by trade organisations including the Federation of Wholesale Distributors, UK Hospitality and the Provision Trade Federation.

Richard Harrow, chief executive, BFFF, said until the hospitality sector returned to normal, all operators would face uncertainty about when stock would be called upon and which products would be required.

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