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Fruit Logistica 2018 to focus on fresh technologies

One of the most important trends in today’s fresh produce business is its increasing ability to deliver products that are ripe and ready at the right time. Those companies investing in technology to ensure products meet consumer expectations are now reaping the rewards.

Visitors to next year’s Fruit Logistica trade fair, which takes place in Berlin on 7-9 February 2018, will be able to learn how technology – from research into new varieties to hi-tech processing equipment – can boost product quality.

Fruit Logistica Global Brand Manager Wilfried Wollbold comments: “As consumers become more interested in eating healthily, fresh produce suppliers and their service providers have an enormous opportunity to satisfy that demand. To do so, however, they must show that they can offer buyers tasty, high-quality products that are also convenient, safe, readily available and, in many cases, sourced ethically and sustainably. Fruit Logistica is the best place to do that by far.”

Avocados are perhaps the best example of how such innovation is combining with other improvements, like year-round availability, to drive up consumption. Belgian importer Special Fruit has bought into new technology to ensure better results. “We’ve invested in more ripening cells, more ripening experts and state-of-the art machinery from MAF Roda that sorts and packs avocados in a more efficient way, and performs an extra quality check,” explains the company’s Sarah Hellemans.

Those improvements have helped all Europe’s major markets to register double-digit growth in avocado import value over the past five years (ITC data). In the UK, where the increase was 35 per cent, Walmart-owned retailer Asda and supplier Worldwide Fruit recently began using Dutch firm Aweta’s acoustic sensor system to measure the fruit’s firmness. As a result, the retailer is now able to market the product in store at three distinct levels of ripeness.

Fruit Logistica 2018 will also illustrate how the same upward trend is being noted for other products like mangoes and papayas, driven by technological improvement. For more mainstream items like apples, meanwhile, the introduction of better technology – like the first ever Unical 8.0 grader, installed earlier this year by Unitec at Italian exporter Minguzzi – is equally important.

Companies wanting to exhibit at Fruit Logistica 2018 can still register, provided they do so online by 31 July 2017.

For more information: www.fruitlogistica.de
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