Bio-methane Replaces One-third of Plants' Natural Gas Purchases
LOWVILLE, N.Y., Sept. 17 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- With a vested interest
in conducting business in a way that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, Kraft
Foods (NYSE: KFT) has placed sustainability at center stage. Two of its New
York cheese plants took leading roles today, as Kraft announced completion of
waste-to-energy projects at manufacturing facilities in Lowville and Campbell.
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'This is a time of opportunity for us,' said Steve Yucknut, Kraft's Vice
President, Sustainability. 'Our customers want to do business with partners
who support sustainability. Consumers want to buy products from companies that
'get it' and employees want to work for companies that respect and preserve
the world around them. So, we've increased our focus on sustainability
because it's the right thing to do and it makes good business sense.'
As a food and beverage company, Kraft is especially dependent on the
ability of the Earth to produce the raw materials used every day to make Kraft
products. While sustainability is not new to Kraft, a more focused approach
is. 'Kraft's sustainability impact goes across the full supply chain -- from
farm to fork. That creates a lot of opportunities, but we are choosing to
look at six areas where we believe we can have the biggest impact:
agriculture, packaging, energy, water, waste, and transportation,' Yucknut
added.
Enough Alternative Energy to Heat 2,600 Homes in Northeast
The project showcased at Lowville is one of two waste-to-energy
initiatives Kraft has undertaken in New York. The Kraft plants in Lowville
and Campbell are using bio-methane from on-site waste treatment systems to
replace 30-35 percent of each plant's annual natural gas purchases in a year.
Whey, one of the most significant waste byproducts from cheese plants, is the
source of the alternative energy, which is created when whey is treated in
each plant's anaerobic digester system.
'Whey disposal has long been a challenge,' Yucknut said. 'Our facilities
have previously used strategies such as concentrating the whey to reduce
volume and finding outlets for it to be used as animal feed, or for fertilizer
on environmentally approved farm fields. Both methods required transporting
the whey offsite.