According to independent evaluators of Foodstuffs North Island's (FSNI) trial, facial recognition technology has reduced serious harm in supermarkets by an estimated 16 percent. It has strong public support, justifying its use.
FSNI’s six-month trial in February 2024 involved 25 New World and PAK’nSAVE stores throughout the North Island. The goal was to determine whether FR could reduce serious store harm while respecting customer privacy through strict processes.
The final evaluation report by Scarlatti, an independent analytics firm that monitored and evaluated the trial, found “strong quantitative evidence” that using FR reduced severe harmful behaviour in trial stores by an estimated 16 percent.
Scarlatti’s report said 1,742 FR alerts of offenders and their accomplices were generated across stores during the trial, an average of 70 alerts per store. Of these, around 50 percent resulted in the person being approached.
Scarlatti Director, Dr Adam Barker, said the 16 percent harm reduction was equivalent to around 100 serious harm events averted, including assaults, abuse and other aggressive or disorderly conduct.
“Around half of that reduction can be attributed to actual interventions by supermarket staff, approaching someone who’s a repeat offender before they can do more harm, with the remainder due to the deterrent effect, stopping them returning,” said Dr Barker.
Scarlatti noted nine instances of someone being approached but found to be the wrong person, two of which resulted in them being asked to leave. All nine were attributable to a failure in the human process. However, Dr Barker said the benefits of using FR outweighed the risks, justifying its use.
“While our best estimate of harm reduction was 16 percent, a nationally representative survey of over 1,000 adults undertaken as an independent research study by OnePicture found 79 percent were accepting of FR being used in retail settings even if it reduced harm by less than one percent.”
Foodstuffs North Island’s General Counsel, Julian Benefield, said the co-op had seen a sharp increase in retail crime in stores in recent years, particularly violent and aggressive crime.
“We have a moral and legal duty to do all we can to keep our teams and customers safe. The goal has been to learn if facial recognition can reduce harm while respecting everyone’s privacy,” said Benefield.
“Scarlatti’s conclusion that FR prevented over 100 serious events at just 25 stores over six months shows the potential for harm reduction across our wider store network.”
Scarlatti’s report said there was no detectable change in sales volumes at trial stores relative to other Foodstuffs stores, suggesting few customers changed their shopping preferences due to the technology being trialled.
Benefield said the trial showed the potential to make retail stores safer while highlighting the possibility of human error if strict rules aren’t followed.
“Of those misidentifications where we approached a customer, we acknowledged our mistake and apologised as soon as possible. We have also implemented further training and changed our verification processes,” added Benefield.
“With 1,742 positive alerts, we’ve gotten it right over 98 percent of the time, allowing us to identify repeat offenders and intervene early before they could cause further harm in a store.”
FSNI’s latest retail crime statistics for the July to September 2024 quarter showed the total number of incidents was 4,933, up nearly five percent from the previous quarter and 41 percent from the same period in 2023.
Repeat offenders were responsible for almost 38 percent of all incidents, including 554 cases of breaching trespass. There were 40 assaults during the quarter, up from 29 a year earlier.
“Every case of assault and abuse has an impact on at least one of our team members – they can even be life-changing events. Our stores must be allowed to take the reasonable steps available to them to try to ensure that doesn’t keep happening.”
Foodstuffs North Island will now await the findings of the Privacy Commissioner’s public inquiry into its facial recognition trial before deciding whether to use FR in its stores further.
As announced by FSNI in September 2024, the 25 stores participating in the trial have continued to use FR in the interim, using the same privacy protocols and processes they used during the trial.
