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      Building a Resilient, Sustainable, and Healthier Food Supply Through Innovation and Technology

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          Abstract

          The modern food supply faces many challenges. The global population continues to grow and people are becoming wealthier, so the food production system must respond by creating enough high-quality food to feed everyone with minimal damage to our environment. The number of people suffering or dying from diet-related chronic diseases, such as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and cancer, continues to rise, which is partly linked to overconsumption of highly processed foods, especially high-calorie or rapidly digestible foods. After falling for many years, the number of people suffering from starvation or malnutrition is rising, and thishas been exacerbated by the global COVID-19 pandemic. The highly integrated food supply chains that spread around the world are susceptible to disruptions due to policy changes, economic stresses, and natural disasters, as highlighted by the recent pandemic. In this perspective article, written by members of the Editorial Committee of the Annual Review of Food Science and Technology, we highlight some of the major challenges confronting the modern food supply chain as well as how innovations in policy and technology can be used to address them. Pertinent technological innovations include robotics, machine learning, artificial intelligence, advanced diagnostics, nanotechnology, biotechnology, gene editing, vertical farming, and soft matter physics. Many of these technologies are already being employed across the food chain by farmers, distributors, manufacturers, and consumers to improve the quality, nutrition, safety, and sustainability of the food supply. These innovations are required to stimulate the development and implementation of new technologies to ensure a more equitable, resilient, and efficient food production system. Where appropriate, these technologies should be carefully tested before widespread implementation so that proper risk–benefit analyses can be carried out. They can then be employed without causing unforeseen adverse consequences. Finally, it is important to actively engage all stakeholders involved in the food supply chain throughout the development and testing of these new technologies to support their adoption if proven safe and effective.

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          Nonthermal Technologies for Fruit and Vegetable Juices and Beverages: Overview and Advances: Nonthermal for juices and beverages…

          In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the design of novel nonthermal processing systems that minimally modify sensory, nutritional, and functional properties of fruit and vegetable juices and beverages. The benefits of nonthermal treatments are strongly dependent on the food matrix. Thus, an understanding of the effects that these technologies exert on the properties of juices and beverages is important to design and optimize technological parameters to produce value-added products. This review covers research on nonthermal electrical treatments, high pressure processing, ultrasound, radiation processing, inert gas treatments, cold plasma, and membrane processing. Advances towards optimization of processing conditions, and combined technologies approaches have been also extensively reviewed. This information could be useful to: (1) manage processing systems and optimize resources; (2) preserve nutritional value and organoleptic properties, and (3) provide processing conditions for validation of these technologies at the industrial scale.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Annual Review of Food Science and Technology
            Annu. Rev. Food Sci. Technol.
            Annual Reviews
            1941-1413
            1941-1421
            March 25 2021
            March 25 2021
            : 12
            : 1
            : 1-28
            Affiliations
            [1 ]Department of Food Science, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, USA;
            [2 ]Department of Food, Bioprocessing and Nutrition Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA
            [3 ]APC Microbiome Ireland and School of Microbiology, University College Cork, Cork T12YT20, Ireland
            [4 ]Department of Food Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA
            [5 ]Department of Food, Bioprocessing, and Nutrition Sciences, North Carolina State University, Kannapolis, North Carolina 28081, USA
            [6 ]Protein Chemistry and Enzyme Technology Division, Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark, DTU, DK-2800, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
            [7 ]Department of Nutrition and Food Science, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA
            Article
            10.1146/annurev-food-092220-030824
            33348992
            ff767df4-0c22-43aa-8066-bd5a31a990aa
            © 2021
            History

            General life sciences,Immunology,Social & Behavioral Sciences,Health & Social care,Infectious disease & Microbiology,Public health

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