Ultra-sensitive food safety tests may drive food waste and unavailability with limited public health benefit, according to a Frontiers in Science lead article.
Hear from the article authors— Prof Martin Wiedmann , Prof Sophia Johler , and Sriya Sunil —as they argue that food systems would be more sustainable if hazard-based assessments were replaced with more flexible risk-based approaches. Their new article outlines how formal trade-off risk assessments can help align food safety policies with sustainability goals.
Join the authors at our Frontiers in Science Deep Dive webinar on 30 April 2026 , 16:00–17:30 CEST , as they discuss how advanced modeling tools—such as the Monte Carlo quantitative microbial risk assessments (MC-QMRAs), geographic information system (GIS) models, and AI-driven predictive tools—can inform smarter, more transparent food safety decisions.
Balancing food safety and sustainability: trade-off risk assessments and predictive modeling | 30 April 2026 | Register
Frontiers in Science Deep Dive sessions bring researchers, policy experts, and innovators together from around the world to discuss a specific area of transformational science published in Frontiers' flagship, multidisciplinary journal, Frontiers in Science, and explore next steps for the field.