By Rhea Wessel
April 17, 2008—The Italian arm of Swiss food company
Nestlé is expanding a pilot employing active, battery-powered ultrahigh-
frequency (
UHF)
RFID tags to track ice cream as it moves from production factories to distribution centers and on to retail stores.
At the beginning of 2007, Piergiorgio Marasi, a supply chain ice cream and frozen food project and quality manager at
Nestlé Italy, asked Swiss integrator
IP01 to design a system that would help the company achieve better control of its distribution process. Nestlé sought to ensure ice cream stayed frozen at prescribed temperatures as it changed hands among a variety of internal and external partners before being delivered to shops.
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Nestlé's delivery trucks transport ice cream from production factories to distribution centers and on to retail stores.
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Marasi visited a
Manor grocery store in Switzerland, which employs a system implemented and managed by IP01 (
At Manor, RFID Keeps Food From Spoiling). The system features stationary interrogators that receive temperature measurements transmitted by active RFID
sensor tags installed in the store's freezers and refrigerators.
Marasi, however, wanted a system with mobile readers that could be mounted on delivery trucks or worn by delivery personnel so there would be no additional manual steps for workers.Therefore, he launched a feasibility study with the RFID Solution Center in Milan, and worked closely with IP01 engineers to design a custom solution.
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Nestlé fitted the interior of its delivery trucks with active RFID tags with a built-in temperature sensor mounted inside.
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Nestlé Italy has a massive cold-chain network that includes dozens of production plants (some company-owned, others run by co-manufacturers); hundreds of trucks that move goods between the production plants and Nestlé's three primary cold warehouses, as well as between primary cold warehouses to retailers' cold warehouses; dozens of secondary distributors; and hundreds of small delivery trucks that transport ice cream to retail shops utilizing more than 100,000 Nestlé-owned freezers.
In April 2007, Nestlé and IP01 chose a representative number of sites to participate in the pilot. The partners placed temperature-sensing RFID tags in two cold storage areas and one at the dock door of a production plant, as well as on five delivery trucks, in two cold storage areas at a single primary distribution center, in two cold storage areas at a secondary distributor, in two ice cream delivery trucks and at 50 shops. Two interrogators were placed at a loading area in the production plant, and another was mounted in the distribution center's delivery area. If sites were large and tags were out of the
reader's range, IP01 installed a repeater that expands signal range so that only one reader was necessary.
READER'S COMMENTS
Nestle
I visited Nestle in 1999 about Ice Cream tracking in Rome, Italy. This company reminds me of CAT who in 1996 had an interest in RFID for assembly line tracking. On a visit in 2007 CAT was still in the same place as 1996. I suspect that Nestle is the same. I bet there is no ice cream reality and Nestle is still locked in indecision. Make me a lier and tell RFID Journal that there is full implementation, and not a picture of one proof of concept ice cream truck with RFID. I liked the part of Rome Nestle office is located. That person that built an empire and knew how to get things done; AND got the train to run on time :)
Posted By: G. STEWART 4/23/2008 at 11:18:03 PM