Close Menu
Simply Invest Asia
  • Home
  • Industries
  • Investment
  • Money
  • Precious Metals
  • Property
  • Stock & Shares
  • Trading
What's Hot

Martin Lewis explains how to get much better return on savings

March 7, 2026

Costco’s Strong Growth Continues. But Is the Stock Too Expensive?

March 7, 2026

Platinum deficit set to continue for 4th yr; shortage may shrink 75%

March 7, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Martin Lewis explains how to get much better return on savings
  • Costco’s Strong Growth Continues. But Is the Stock Too Expensive?
  • Platinum deficit set to continue for 4th yr; shortage may shrink 75%
  • Boost tax-free Personal Allowance for savings with HMRC pension rule | Personal Finance | Finance
  • Best savings accounts as lenders cut rates
  • Arbitrage Trading: Profiting from Crypto Price Differences
  • Why Grocery Outlet Stock Dived by 33% This Week
  • Osmium Believes Electing its Four Directors Will Maximize and Unlock Shareholder Value
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Simply Invest Asia
  • Home
  • Industries
  • Investment
  • Money
  • Precious Metals
  • Property
  • Stock & Shares
  • Trading
Simply Invest Asia
Home»Industries»The 2025 Food Manufacturing Outlook: Growth Ambition Meets Cost Reality
Industries

The 2025 Food Manufacturing Outlook: Growth Ambition Meets Cost Reality

By LucasOctober 14, 20253 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Executive take: Leaders are planning for higher throughput and bigger capex — even as unit costs climb and supply-chain variability complicates preventive controls, according to Food Engineering’s latest State of Food Manufacturing survey. Turning that pressure into performance will hinge on modernization, workforce upskilling, and end-to-end traceability.


From the data: Scaling output amid inflation and labor gaps

Throughput rises (for those who can staff it)

A clear majority of the food and beverage manufacturing professionals expect throughput to rise in 2025 (by an average of 20%). Yet about one in 10 anticipate declines, often tied to labor constraints and market pressures — echoed by respondents who say they may “produce less product” due to shortages.

Unit economics are under strain

Nearly eight in 10 respondents report higher total cost per product compared to 2024, with the mean increase being 13%. Labor costs are widely expected to rise, and 81% also project material cost increases, driven by ingredients, raw materials, and logistics.

Budgets are following the strategy

More than half expect larger budgets for production, packaging, process control equipment, software, and services. On average, 27% of annual budgets are earmarked for equipment purchases, with a full third planning to spend over $1 million and nearly one in 10 spending to $5 million or more.

Food safety and traceability are intensifying

Nearly half of respondents conducted safety training in the past year. Top planned food safety buys include lab testing/analysis tools and food safety management systems. Methods in use are led by allergen controls and comprehensive staff training, with lot- and item-level traceability prevalent. The hardest preventive control for many sites is maintaining supply-chain consistency — up notably from last year.

Action steps for food manufacturing leaders

1. Invest where it offsets cost inflation fastest

Prioritize autonomous inspection and real-time SPC to cut scrap, predictive maintenance to protect OEE, and finite-scheduling/line-balance optimization to unlock planned throughput without incremental headcount. Tie each project to a 12-24-month payback using your baseline cost-per-product deltas from the research.

2. Pair automation with upskilling

Where labor limits output, combine targeted automation with skills pathways: micro-learning for sanitation/allergen control, certification tracks for PLC/HMI operators, and cross-training to smooth absenteeism shocks. This addresses both the growth opportunity and the risk of forced volume reductions.

3. Turn FSMA-driven traceability into a growth enabler

Build lot/item-level traceability into supplier scorecards, hold-and-release workflows, and customer onboarding. Beyond compliance, this reduces recall exposure and supports premium, allergen-sensitive or clean-label SKUs where price realization is stronger.

4. Harden preventive controls at the supplier interface

Since supply-chain consistency is the hardest control for many, dual-source critical inputs, pre-qualify alternates, and implement digital incoming-QC to contain variability before it hits the line.

5. Govern with a standardized playbook

To execute across plants, stand up a common model for business-case gating, implementation sprints, change management, and KPI reporting (OEE, FPY, labor efficiency, audit readiness). This aligns capital plans with measurable risk and return.


The 2025 landscape pairs growth plans with cost and compliance pressure. Budget is available, but leaders must convert it into throughput, traceability, and talent. Use the momentum around FSMA and capex to institutionalize a modern ops stack that pays for itself and scales across sites.  

Supplier Catalog - Redzone



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Invoking emergency powers, India asks oil refiners to ramp up LPG output

March 7, 2026

UK Lords warn of AI impact on creative industries

March 7, 2026

Government’s AI copyright reforms set for delay after backlash from creative industries

March 6, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Our Picks

Utilities: The Unexpected AI Infrastructure Trade

March 2, 2026

Canada’s oil industry thrives as sales to China soar

January 27, 2026

2026 Land Rover Defender gets a bold refresh with new tech

November 8, 2025

Investor urges public-private Lindsey Oil Refinery rescue deal

October 15, 2025
Don't Miss
Money

Martin Lewis explains how to get much better return on savings

By LucasMarch 7, 2026

Money Saving Expert Martin Lewis has shown how you could get up to 7.5 per…

Costco’s Strong Growth Continues. But Is the Stock Too Expensive?

March 7, 2026

Platinum deficit set to continue for 4th yr; shortage may shrink 75%

March 7, 2026

Boost tax-free Personal Allowance for savings with HMRC pension rule | Personal Finance | Finance

March 7, 2026
Our Picks

Warning to savers moving money as Rachel Reeves closes ‘loophole’ | Personal Finance | Finance

November 30, 2025

Unpacking the Latest Options Trading Trends in BioNTech – BioNTech (NASDAQ:BNTX)

January 18, 2026

Will Rachel steal Kemi’s stamp duty plan and set the property market alight?

October 13, 2025
Weekly Pick's

1.1m pensioners could pay income tax on savings accounts

October 21, 2025

Macquarie-led investor group to acquire manufacturer Potters Industries

November 12, 2025

Senegal opens large-scale vegetable oil refinery in Sendou

January 30, 2026
Monthly Featured

United Utilities advice as cold snap hits East Lancashire

January 14, 2026

Drone attacks Russian oil refinery more than 1,000 kilometers from Ukraine

October 15, 2025

Chinese direct investment in Europe rises for first time in seven years

October 26, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2026 Simply Invest Asia.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.