The Niagara Falls Review

COVID-19 pandemic will redefine the way we shop for groceries and use food services

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is senior director of the agri-food analytics lab and a professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University.© Troy Media

Convenienc­e now has a different meaning. It’s less about saving time and more about survival and safety. Before the crisis, barely anyone ordered online and many Canadians wondered why someone would ever order food in that fashion.

But many things are changing — rapidly. The in-store shopping experience, for one, is changing quickly to meet the new standards.

Most grocers have reduced shopping hours to give employees a rest and allow stores to be thoroughly cleaned, from counters to carts, cashiers’ machines to self-checkout counters. Plexiglas barriers at checkouts are being installed. Grocery stores are now expected to be as clean as hospital operating rooms. That comes at a cost.

Grocers are also limiting the number of people in stores at any time and getting customers to shop within a limited time. This is shopping under pressure for the betterment of society. And grocers need to pay employees more to work under these conditions. While 500,000 Canadians got laid off last week, Loblaws and Metro announced pay increases.

For many years, the industry wanted to make the in-store experience more pleasant, less stressful. COVID-19 changes all this.

According to a report released by Dalhousie University this week, only 24 per cent of Canadians are comfortabl­e with the idea of grocery shopping. Selling to someone who is concerned about their own health as they visit your facility isn’t good for business.

In the United States, some changes are already happening. Downloads of Instacart, Walmart’s grocery app and Shipt increased 218, 160 and 124 per cent respective­ly last week over a year ago.

Grocers are already having difficulty keeping up.

COVID-19 is different in many ways to other disruptive events in our lives. But humans are creatures of habits. So it takes time to change our ways.

COVID-19 may provide the time needed to change how we purchase food. Public health officials believe social distancing could last for months. With crises and disruption­s come opportunit­ies for the food industry to adapt to changing consumer needs more quickly.

Over the last few years, the industry has slowly gained an online presence to counter the Amazon menace. But it was all about Amazon. Now, purchasing online is all about safety.

Before Amazon, foot traffic was the one metric grocers looked at carefully. Those days are long gone.

The circumstan­ces are similar in the food service industry. Restaurant­s either served patrons inhouse or delivered by managing delivery crews. Food delivery apps changed all that — and even more Canadians are using them since the start of the COVID-19 outbreak.

COVID-19 has the potential to be as disruptive to the food retail and service industries as the Green Revolution was to agricultur­e.

The Green Revolution made agricultur­e more adaptable to modern consumptio­n trends. Since its beginning in the 1950s, the globe has five billion more occupants and the percentage of people who are food insecure has dropped significan­tly.

The Green Revolution made the entire sector more efficient, smarter, and more immune to threatenin­g diseases and other sociotechn­ological threats.

The Green Revolution has been far from perfect but consumers have all benefited from it, whether we recognize it or not.

Food distributi­on through different technologi­es won’t be perfect either but it will make food distributi­on more compliant to our modern reality.

When brick-and-mortar location becomes secondary, a business’s path to success in food distributi­on changes dramatical­ly.

The transition from traditiona­l agricultur­e, with inputs generated on-farm, to the Green Revolution, requiring the purchase of inputs, led to the widespread establishm­ent of different credit processes. An entire new ecosystem was built to support agricultur­e.

With COVID-19, we may see the rise of dark or ghost kitchens in food service, allowing anyone to start a company, virtual or not. The establishm­ent of more micro-fulfilment centres or dark warehouses to support grocers and other food retailers will redesign the entire sector.

This doesn’t mean Canadians will stop visiting grocery stores, farmers’ markets or restaurant­s any time soon. But in five years or sooner, we could see 20 per cent of all food sold online or through apps, restaurant­s and retail combined. That’s potentiall­y more than $50 billion worth of food. According to estimates, that market represents $7 to $9 billion now.

What was often seen as a farfetched concept just a few years ago appears to be likely now because of COVID-19.

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