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Bühler's Insect Technology Center Supports Animal Feed, Food Industries

Company officially opens facility, which will help accelerate large-scale insect plant initiatives, in Uzwil, Switzerland

Photo: Bühler Group
Photo: Bühler Group

Bühler Group officially opened its Insect Technology Center (ITC) in Uzwil, Switzerland.

The facility will allow Bühler and its customers can conduct larvae growth trials with various feedstock, develop product samples, evaluate breed solutions, and run trainings.

The ITC, which obtained funding from Switzerland’s Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN) due to its contribution to a more sustainable food system, is already in operation.

In December, Bühler announced it was partnering with French insect producer Agronutris to build its first commercial scale black soldier fly plant in Rethel, France.

The opening of the Insect Technology Center in Uzwil is a major milestone, said Andreas Baumann, head of Insect Technology at Bühler.

"Over the last years, we have gained expertise and maturity to serve different customers in the insect industry with the most adequate and reliable solutions," said Baumann.

"With our new facility, we extend our services and can even better support our customers in installing an industrial insect plant."

Insect Technology Center hosts growth chambers

At the heart of the center, there are two insect growth chambers that can mimic industrial production conditions.

These chambers have a sophisticated climate control system and are equipped with numerous sensors that give valuable process insights.

Based on the collected data, the right parameters and practices can be determined to finally ensure an efficient insect production at industrial scale.

At the ITC, it is possible to work with the two most relevant insect species for industrial production, namely black soldier flies and mealworms.

"A company that wants to build an industrial insect plant needs to cover several operational aspects," explained Baumann.

"It includes finding the correct feedstock to rear the larvae, making sure that there is a strong and suitable insect strain to grow, defining suitable climate settings in relation to the larvae growth cycle, or getting emission data required for the permitting process.".

In addition to the services offered to customers, Bühler’s team will run its own tests, thereby constantly improving the technology and services for the insect market.

Accelerating insect plant projects

The ITC aims to accelerate large-scale insect plant initiatives said the company.

By using the new test facility, customers might not need to invest into expensive pilot plants to demonstrate technological feasibility.

Seeing the industrial insect technology in action makes it tangible, which allows customers to directly envision commercially attractive plant sizes.

Since the insect growth chambers are mobile, they can be sent to any location, thus making the infrastructure accessible to customers worldwide.

“In combination with the operational know-how exchange, we see enormous potential to reduce the overall time from the project idea to a successfully performing plant,” said Baumann.

Contributing to a circular economy

Bühler said it is committed to ambitious targets that will help mitigate climate change and build a more sustainable food system.

Insects are a healthy and sustainable source of protein for food and feed. In addition, their frass can be used as a fertilizer, contributing to a circular economy model of production.

The insect feed protein market is expected to reach half a million metric tons in 2030.

By then, the pet food sector is projected to take 30% and aquaculture 40% of the total insect protein volumes.

“We are devoted to supporting the industry in reaching its full potential," says Baumann.

"Over the last years we have gained maturity and built the skills for helping the industry to further develop. With proven technologies in our portfolio, we are ready to enable our customers in bringing insect-based products to the market."

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