Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Today's Edition

EveryNews

Stories that matter, signal over noise

Business

TraceMap: EU launches AI for real-time product checks — opportunity and challenge for Ukrainian exports

The European Commission has launched the TraceMap platform, which will monitor supply chains and risks in the food sector in near-real time. The tool's introduction changes transparency requirements and could both facilitate and complicate Ukrainian products' access to the European market.

Tetiana Suchkova-Ladik

By Tetiana Suchkova-Ladik

March 11, 2026 · 2 min read

TraceMap: EU launches AI for real-time product checks — opportunity and challenge for Ukrainian exports
Фото: Depositphotos

Briefly: what happened and why it matters

The European Commission has officially launched TraceMap — an AI-based platform for monitoring food safety and detecting fraud in supply chains. The system is already available to national authorities in all EU countries and promises faster detection of risks and responses to foodborne disease outbreaks. For Ukraine, this is both an operational advantage and a set of new regulatory standards to which it will have to adapt.

What TraceMap is and how it works

TraceMap analyzes large datasets from existing EU systems — notably RASFF (the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed) and TRACES (the Trade Control and Expert System for monitoring trade and movement of animal products) — and visualizes supply chains on graphical maps. The platform's task is to reveal hidden links between operators and batches of goods so inspectors can quickly focus inspections and remove suspicious products before they reach the end consumer.

"TraceMap is a breakthrough that revolutionizes the EU's ability to respond to food safety crises and to stop food fraud"

— Oliver Várhelyi, EU Commissioner for Health and Animal Welfare

What data and examples confirm the need for such a tool

European systems are already recording rising risks: in 2024 RASFF notifications increased by 12% to 5,250, and the number of foodborne disease outbreaks reached 6,558 — +14.5% compared with the previous year (EFSA data). One third of notifications concerned import refusals due to pesticide residues, most commonly in fruits and vegetables from Turkey, Egypt and India. A TraceMap pilot has already helped trace an infant formula contaminated with ARA oil from China.

What this means for Ukraine — risks and opportunities

Opportunities: for Ukrainian exporters, transparency and rapid response can become a competitive advantage. Quick confirmation of origin and safety of batches shortens investigation time and reduces the risk of large-scale removals.

Risks: increased digital visibility also means stricter control: EU inspectors will be able to detect anomalies more quickly, which may temporarily increase border holds for suppliers that do not yet have full digital reporting.

Practical steps for government and business

To turn the challenge into an advantage, Ukrainian exporters and regulators should focus on three things:

  • data integration: connecting Ukrainian tracking systems and laboratory results to European standards and formats;
  • investment in laboratory diagnostics and digital "passport" solutions for product batches;
  • transparent communication with EU partners — quickly providing proof of origin and test results reduces the risk of trade restrictions.

Conclusion

TraceMap is changing the rules of food safety monitoring in the EU: control is becoming more timely and digital. For Ukraine's agricultural sector this is a chance to raise trust in its products and secure positions on markets — provided that authorities and businesses quickly align processes with the new standards. Whether the agricultural sector can turn this challenge into a competitive advantage depends on the speed of reforms and investments in quality and transparency.

Related

Latest

Business

EU Against Google: Why the Latest Fine Could Change More Than Previous Ones

# European Regulators Target Google Again — This Time Over Digital Markets Act Violations. What's Behind the Accusations and Why It Matters Beyond the Corporation European regulators have renewed their scrutiny of Google, this time focusing on alleged violations of the Digital Markets Act. The charges underscore Brussels' increasingly aggressive stance on big tech monopolies and what officials say are anticompetitive practices. The accusations center on how Google leverages its dominance across multiple digital services — from search to advertising to mobile platforms — to disadvantage competitors. Regulators claim the company is using its market power in ways that stifle innovation and limit consumer choice. The case carries significance far beyond Google itself. It signals how the EU is attempting to enforce its landmark Digital Markets Act, legislation designed to curb the gatekeeping power of tech giants. A potential penalty could set precedent for how other large technology companies face similar scrutiny. For consumers and smaller tech firms, the outcome could reshape the digital landscape by creating more room for competition. For Google, fines and operational restrictions could fundamentally alter its business model in Europe, the world's most stringent regulatory market. The case also reflects a broader geopolitical divide, with the EU pursuing a regulatory approach that contrasts sharply with the lighter-touch oversight favored in the United States.

May 26, 2026