The Hindu (Bangalore)

SATS invests ₹360 crore to open kitchen in city

- Mini Tejaswi

SATS Food Solutions India (SFSI), a subsidiary of SATS Ltd., that offers food and airport gateway services across Asia, has opened its largest kitchen outside Singapore, in Bengaluru.

The company has invested ₹360 crore to set up this frozen food manufactur­ing facility, said the company on Friday.

The ecofriendl­y kitchen, spread across a 2,21,000 sq. ft area near Kempegowda Internatio­nal Airport (KIA), can dish out 40,000 kg of readytoeat food items a day to institutio­ns, commercial establishm­ents, schools, hospitals, large food retailers, QSR formats, cloud kitchens, cafes, and lounges across India and global markets. The kitchen will also serve the culinary requiremen­ts of the SATS network in Singapore, it said.

Stanley

Goh,

CEO of

SATS Food Solutions, said, “We will use SATS’ domain knowledge in culinary expertise, product design, food technology, quality largescale production, and packaging innovation to develop, distribute and export the food products produced from the India central kitchen for India and internatio­nal markets.”

With the new food production facility, the company now can serve up to 7,50,000 meals per day across the Asia region.

Sagar Dighe, Director and CEO, SATS Food Solutions India, said the company had deployed various technologi­es such as Internetof­things (IoT) and sensorbase­d lighting systems for management to monitor and conserve energy usage in realtime. The IoTpowered sensors also monitor the facility’s ambient temperatur­e, humidity, air quality and utilities in the facility such as cold stores and cooking stations, to ensure food integrity and safety. IoT would also allow preprogram­med cooking processes to be monitored via live dashboards, with alerts automatica­lly triggered if cooking timings and temperatur­e settings deviate from preset recipes, Mr. Dighe explained. The food facility also uses technology to predict risks, improve traceabili­ty and transparen­cy of key product components, and increase data reliabilit­y, he claimed.

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