CSIR, MASFT pursuing rural accredited food testing through mobile labs

15th September 2020 By: Tasneem Bulbulia - Senior Contributing Editor Online

Research organisation, the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), is collaborating with Mobile Agricultural Skills and Development Training (MASDT), a nonprofit company that assists small and medium-sized enterprises in the agricultural sector, to introduce an accessible and affordable mobile food safety testing facility for commercial and small rural farmers in the South African rural agro sector.

"Many farmers (commercial and small-scale) in South Africa's rural areas battle with access to food safety testing facilities for their farm produce. This is mainly because they are located far from laboratories and the transport of samples to these laboratories is challenging.

"The process of handling and transporting samples also compromises the quality of the samples. This challenge results in the farmers losing out on lucrative export opportunities because they cannot provide the required food safety proofs required by the rest of the supply chain," says MASDT acting CEO Innocent Makuwaza.

In response to this challenge, a facility that can perform testing for pathogens, pesticide residue, mycotoxins and heavy metals is envisaged.

Moreover, the facility will offer a customised laboratory information management system with digitised and customised mobile testing equipment that produces results in real time on site.

This collaborative initiative has the potential to be expanded across the country and the region, should the partnership be able to secure the necessary investment from public and private funders, notes the CSIR.

"Increased investment funding in this area would provide small, medium-sized and microenterprises in South Africa with an opportunity to valorise their agricultural products, offering products for sale to retailers and larger processing facilities at a premium with the quality assurance of having met food safety standards.

"Beyond the current proposal, mobile food safety testing laboratories situated at every municipality will help to curb the risk of foodborne illnesses that the country has experienced along some food safety value chains," says CSIR Food Safety Programme manager Dr Dharmarai Naicker.

The feasibility study for the mobile laboratory concept was co-funded by the Department of Science and Innovation and plans are under way to optimise the MASDT mobile facility prototype over a period of three years.

This facility, which was initially funded through the Small Enterprise Development Agency, aims to ensure that accreditation for testing is received, that the project gains financial sustainability and that it targets the agricultural sector in clearly defined areas.