Food waste + fly larvae = millions of dollars for this facility north of Calgary
Federal Agriculture Department says company has 'broken new ground' with innovations to feed animals
A British Columbia company that feeds food waste to insects to produce pet food has received $6 million from the federal government for a new plant just north of Calgary.
Enterra Feed Corp. last year opened a 17,500-square-metre production facility, about the size of three football fields.
It's been producing insect-based feed ingredients out of the Rocky View plant for the pet food, poultry and wild bird markets in North America and Europe.
The insects are black soldier flies and the plant is able to recycle 130 tonnes of food waste per day and turn it into 10 tonnes of high-protein feed along with 10,000 to 15,000 tonnes of organic fertilizer.
"It's really quite disheartening how much of that food doesn't make it to the plate,'' said Enterra president Keith Driver.
"It's really surprising how much of that product is out there and available.''
The fly larvae are fed a mixture of food waste and agricultural byproducts — primarily fruits and vegetables that come from food processors.
The insects can then be fed to poultry and fish as well as to cats, dogs and reptiles. A trial is underway to see if it will work in the pork sector as well.
"Black soldier flies are prolific breeders. They grow very quickly — one million per cent of their body weight in just three weeks,'' said Driver. "They're very docile to manage.''
Billions in annual food waste is avoidable, feds say
The federal Agriculture Department says more than half — roughly 35.5 million tonnes — of Canada's food supply is lost or wasted annually and $49.5 billion of that waste is avoidable. In addition, eight per cent of all greenhouse gases worldwide are the result of food waste.
"You have broken new ground as the first company in Canada to receive regulatory approval to produce animal feed ingredients using flies,'' said federal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau.
"Seeing it on such a scale, I think it's interesting. I'm very open to all of these innovations that can feed animals but also feed the world.''
Driver said Enterra plans to eventually open another plant in either Ontario or Quebec, but progress has been slowed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Our sources of feedstock tend to be in and around metropolitan regions.''