Across the Middle East and Africa (MEA), the demand for processed potato products is rising fast—driven by urbanization, population growth, and evolving consumer diets. As processors expand capacity to meet this demand, they face mounting pressure to uphold international food safety standards while contending with regional realities: high temperatures, fluctuating humidity, and limited access to clean water.
In these conditions, sanitation is more than a compliance exercise—it’s essential to maintaining food safety, brand integrity, and equipment uptime. Achieving consistent hygiene while reducing water and chemical use has become one of the region’s most pressing operational challenges. At FPS, we recognize this balance as central to sustainable growth. Our mission is to help processors in MEA and worldwide adopt hygienic design and sanitation technologies that safeguard food quality while optimizing efficiency.
From Then to Now: The Changing Face of Hygiene
Not long ago, potato processing factories operated only 10 to 16 hours a day, five days a week. Production followed the harvest cycle—starting in August and wrapping up in June—and cleaning was straightforward: fire hoses, plenty of water, and few chemicals. Back then, water alone solved most hygiene challenges.
Four decades later, the industry looks entirely different. Modern factories run continuously for 21 days or more before pausing for sanitation. Cleaning and maintenance teams now have as little as 12 to 24 hours to complete full cleaning and system checks before production restarts.
Efficiency and uptime have become the new priorities, reshaping how hygiene is managed in today’s potato plants.

The New Hygiene Reality
Extended production runs are here to stay. The question facing food processors is no longer how to clean better, but how to stay clean while running.
To remain competitive, factories must achieve stringent food safety standards while minimizing downtime, water usage, and energy consumption—all without compromising product quality. At the same time, global concerns over resource conservation and sustainability are influencing how every facility operates.
Hygiene, once viewed as a maintenance task, has become a strategic business function—central to uptime, safety, and total cost efficiency.
Hygienic Design as a Competitive Advantage
At FPS, we believe equipment design holds the key to achieving these new hygiene standards. Our hygienic engineering philosophy is built on three guiding principles:
- Stay clean in operation – Equipment must minimize contamination risks with smooth surfaces, open layouts, and easy-access points for inspection.
- Self-clean effectively – Integrated Clean-in-Place (CIP) and pasteurization systems must allow sanitation without halting production.
- Use fewer resources – Smart cleaning systems should reduce water, chemical, and energy use while maintaining high sanitation performance.
Our proprietary cleaning and sanitation systems are engineered to help processors extend production safely, control microbial growth, and reduce total cost of ownership. These innovations form the backbone of the next generation of hygienic processing lines—built for high performance, reliability, and global compliance.

Global Challenges, Local Realities
What succeeds in a temperate factory in Europe or North America may not perform as well in tropical or arid environments. In MEA, high humidity and heat can accelerate microbial growth, while water scarcity demands more efficient cleaning strategies.
To ensure consistency across climates, FPS designs equipment tailored to local conditions—whether that means optimizing airflow in humid environments or integrating efficient CIP systems that reduce water dependency. By adapting hygienic design to regional challenges, we help processors maintain safety and uptime in any environment.
Collaboration is the Future
True food safety cannot be achieved in isolation. Equipment suppliers, processors, and regulators must work together to align on shared goals of safety, uptime, and sustainability.
Processors who focus solely on purchase price risk overlooking the broader advantages of hygienic design—improved uptime, lower maintenance, brand protection, and long-term savings. The true measure of value lies in total cost of ownership, not the initial investment.
When hygiene is compromised, the hidden costs—product loss, recalls, and damage to consumer trust—can be far greater than any upfront savings. By fostering collaboration and transparency, the industry can co-develop solutions that strengthen global food safety and operational resilience.
Building a Safer, Smarter Future
FPS is proud to support processors in MEA and around the world as they embrace these challenges. Our goal is to be the partner of choice for those who share our vision of hygienic excellence and sustainable operation.
Food safety is not just a requirement—it’s a shared responsibility. By advancing hygienic design, investing in smart sanitation systems, and building strong partnerships, we can redefine hygiene not as a cost, but as the cornerstone of a safer, smarter, and more sustainable food future.
For more information, visit www.fpscorp.ca
























