Home Innovation How QR codes and digital innovation could cut dairy waste

How QR codes and digital innovation could cut dairy waste

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How QR codes and digital innovation could cut dairy waste

Research from Cornell University found consumers will use QR codes to see how long milk is drinkable, a development that the research authors believe could help cut food waste.

Around 19% of all the dairy products purchased by American households are wasted, making it one of the top three most wasted food groups in the country.

Cornell doctoral student in food science, Samantha Lau, set out to assess what interventions could help bring this figure down.

Lau works in the lab of Martin Wiedmann, the Gellert Family Professor in Food Safety in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Collaborating alongside Cornell’s Milk Quality Improvement Program, Lau connected with the Cornell Dairy Bar, which sells fluid milk and ice cream on campus. The aim of her research was to assess acceptance of QR technology.

Customers were presented with a choice: purchasing milk with printed best-by dates or buying containers with QR codes that, when scanned by a smart phone, would display the best-by date.

In the same Cornell Dairy Bar study, Lau placed a dynamic pricing element where consumers were encouraged to purchase milk with a shorter remaining shelf life – by offering a price discount as the best-by date approached.

“During [the] two-month study, over 60% of customers purchased the milk with the QR code, showing a considerable interest in using this new technology,”​ Lau said. “This revealed that the use of QR codes on food products can be an innovative way to address the larger issue of food waste.”

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