InnovaFeed building world's largest fly farm in Decatur
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[December 18, 2021]
By Zeta Cross
(The Center Square) – InnovaFeed,
a French biotechnology company, is building the world’s largest insect
farm in Decatur, Illinois, next to ADM’s corn processing plant.
Maye Walraven, business development director for InnovaFeed, said the
effort is “revolutionary” because of the impact insect ingredients can
have on improving the sustainability of the food system.
“Our factories enable our partners to do a lot of energy saving, and,
therefore, to significantly decrease their environmental footprints,”
Walraven said. “The real drive behind the project is the impact we can
have and how we can sustainably feed the world tomorrow. Given how many
people there are on earth, it is a huge challenge.”
The InnovaFeed plant will produce black soldier flies
on an industrial scale. Black soldier flies were chosen for their
valuable nutritional properties. Two different ingredients will be
produced from the insects. InnovaFeed will sell the ingredients to
buyers who will use them to manufacture fish food, pet food and animal
food.
“We are not trying to do anything that is not happening in nature,”
Walraven said.
Fish eat flies. Chickens and pigs eat insects off the ground.
“We are trying to place insects in their natural spot in the food
chain,” she said.
What makes it exciting is the impact the effort will have on the
environment, she noted.
InnovaFeed’s Decatur partner is ADM, which has a corn processing plant
nearby. Biomass from the corn processing plant will be used to feed the
insects.
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“The biomass is almost a waste product, with very low value,”
Walraven said. “This is a new way to valorize those byproducts.”
The two different products that the InnovaFeed plant will produce
are a protein powder and an oil. The brown insect meal is very rich
in protein. It resembles cocoa powder, Walraven said. The insect oil
has a very similar profile to that of coconut oil.
“We commercialize it for swine and poultry because it has benefits
on their gut and on their health,” Walraven said.
The idea is to supplement and replace feed with high environmental
costs, with feed made from a sustainable, low-impact source.
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"By feeding farmed fish food made from insects, we can drastically
reduce the impact on the oceans," Walraven said.
In the past 30 years, the growth of aquaculture has exploded, she
said. Last year, for the first time, production of fish from
aquaculture surpassed production from fisheries. The problem has
become how to feed farm-raised fish sustainably – without depleting
the oceans. We are getting to the limit of how much plant-based
protein we can feed to farm-raised fish.
“Insect protein can really be a way to continue the
growth of aquaculture without having such a high impact on marine
resources,” Walraven said. |