FSA and FSS map emerging food technologies

FSA and FSS have mapped emerging food technology priorities. The report highlights near-term regulatory pressure points across novel proteins, fermentation, closed systems, and new ingredient pathways.


IN Brief:

  • FSA and FSS have ranked emerging food innovations by likely impact and feasibility over the next five to 15 years.
  • Priority areas include controlled environment agriculture, precision fermentation, cellular agriculture, biomass fermentation, gas fermentation, and edible insects.
  • Cross-cutting concerns include allergenicity, microbiological hazards in closed systems, process-contact materials, residual impurities, traceability, and consumer information.

The Food Standards Agency and Food Standards Scotland have published a thematic report identifying the food technologies most likely to create new safety and regulatory demands in Great Britain over the next five to 15 years.

The report groups emerging technologies by likely impact and practical feasibility. Controlled environment agriculture and precision fermentation are placed among the highest-priority areas for near-term preparedness, with cellular agriculture, biomass fermentation, gas fermentation, and edible insects also identified as technologies likely to require increasing regulatory attention as commercial activity develops.

Further out, the report highlights molecular farming, algae and seaweed ingredients, and newer forms of fungal and microbial production as areas where the evidence base, production standards, and route-to-market pathways are still evolving. Reverse food manufacturing, described as the recovery of nutrients from food by-products for reuse in new ingredients, is included as a technology to monitor as processing routes and commercial applications mature.

Alongside the technology assessment, the report identifies a set of cross-cutting safety themes that are expected to recur across multiple innovation categories. These include allergenicity linked to novel proteins, microbiological hazards in closed production systems, chemical and material safety issues associated with equipment and process-contact surfaces, residual impurities from bioprocessing, traceability, and consumer information requirements.

The agencies said many of these products will continue to move through existing authorisation routes, particularly the Great Britain novel foods framework, while newer production models may also raise questions around evidence requirements, terminology, and regulatory coordination. The report also points to work already under way through the Market Authorisation Innovation Research Programme and the Cell-Cultivated Products Regulatory Sandbox.

The full report is available here, and the FSA’s Innovative Food Guidance Hub provides current guidance for businesses working in this area.


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