
Digital Shift Accelerates Food Sales Growth (Image Credits: Unsplash)
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization issued a detailed legislative study highlighting the need for updated rules to manage risks in the fast-growing sector of online food sales.[1][2]
Digital Shift Accelerates Food Sales Growth
Online purchases of groceries and meals have expanded dramatically in recent years, fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic and consumer demand for convenience. In Canada, food e-commerce volumes jumped 77 percent between February and September 2020 alone.[1] China’s platform hosts 861 million users, while Indonesia captured 42 percent of ASEAN’s food e-commerce market, valued at USD 1.8 billion in 2021.[1]
This boom offers benefits like home delivery, broader choices, and peer reviews, yet it strains traditional oversight. Authorities now grapple with volatile digital marketplaces where businesses appear and vanish quickly. The FAO study, titled Regulatory Options to Address Food E-Commerce in National Legislation, analyzes these dynamics across six jurisdictions.[2]
Core Challenges Threaten Safety and Trust
Consumers cannot inspect products before buying online, heightening risks from misleading labels or adulterated goods. Perishable items complicate withdrawal rights, as hygiene concerns limit returns in places like the European Union.[1]
Enforcement suffers from business anonymity, cross-border shipments bypassing checks, and difficulties tracing recalls. Platforms often act as mere conduits, shielded by “safe harbor” rules that reduce their accountability. Here are primary hurdles identified:
- Increased operator mobility evades registration and monitoring.
- Cross-border trade hinders import controls and traceability.
- Limited physical assessments rely on unverified digital information.
- Perishable goods challenge consumer remedies like refunds.
- Platforms face unclear liability for third-party listings.
Varied Approaches Across Nations
Legal responses differ sharply among reviewed countries, with few tailored to food e-commerce. China leads with specific laws imposing joint liability on platforms and requiring registration checks.[1] The European Union mandates pre-purchase food details and enables anonymous online buys for inspections.
Others lean on general frameworks. Canada offers voluntary guidance on labeling, while Chile, Indonesia, and Nigeria apply broad e-commerce and consumer laws without food-specific adaptations. The table below compares key elements:
| Country | Specific Measures | Main Gaps |
|---|---|---|
| China | Platform liability, traceability rules | Enforcement on perishables |
| EU | Online info access, enforcement tools | No standalone e-food law |
| Canada | Voluntary labeling guidance | Lacks mandatory platform duties |
| Chile/Indonesia/Nigeria | General e-commerce rules | No food e-commerce focus |
Practical Steps for Lawmakers
The FAO advocates a multidisciplinary strategy blending food safety, consumer protection, and digital trade rules. Policymakers should define roles for traders and platforms clearly, including registration and risk assessments.[3]
Enhance tools like virtual audits and international cooperation. Platforms could adopt self-regulation through codes of conduct. Core proposals include:
- Extend labeling to online pre-purchase displays, prioritizing allergens.
- Impose proactive platform duties beyond safe harbors.
- Equip inspectors for digital monitoring and mystery shopping.
- Promote Codex guidelines on e-commerce food information.
Key Takeaways
- Food e-commerce demands integrated laws, not silos.
- Cross-border cooperation is essential for enforcement.
- Private platforms must share more responsibility.
The FAO report equips governments with adaptable options to safeguard public health amid digital transformation. Access the full study here.[2] How is your nation addressing these e-commerce food risks? Share your thoughts in the comments.


