Oman Daily Observer

Business

- KARL PLUME

Layers of squirming black soldier fly larvae fill large aluminium bins stacked 10high in a warehouse outside of Vancouver. They are feeding on stale bread, rotting mangoes, overripe cantaloupe and squishy zucchini. But this is no garbage dump. It’s a farm.

Enterra Feed, one of an emerging crop of insect growers, will process the bugs into protein-rich food for fish, poultry — even pets.

After being fattened up, the fly larvae will be roasted, dried and bagged or pressed to extract oils, then milled into a brown powder that smells like roasted peanuts.

The small but growing insect farming sector has captured attention and investment­s from some heavyweigh­ts in the $400 billion-a-year animal feed business, including US agricultur­al powerhouse Cargill Inc, feed supplier and farm products and services company Wilbur-ellis Co and Swiss-based Buhler Group, which makes crop processing machinery.

Fast food giant Mcdonald’s is studying using insects for chicken feed to reduce reliance on soy protein.

“This pioneering work is currently at the proof-of-concept stage,” Nicola Robinson, Mcdonald’s Corp sustainabl­e supply chain manager, said. ‘‘We are encouraged by initial results and are committed to continuing to support further research.”

The fact that such global food production giants are turning to insects illustrate­s the lengths they will go to find alternativ­e sources of protein that are profitable and sustainabl­e as animal feed or additives to human food.

Bugs are just one many alternativ­es being studied or developed by major agricultur­al firms.

Others include peas, canola, algae and bacterial proteins.

Global population growth and an expanding middle class have raised per capita meat consumptio­n by 50 per cent over the past four decades, fuelling fears of a protein pinch.

Traditiona­l sources of the key macronutri­ent are growing increasing­ly unreliable amid a changing global climate and worries about the environmen­tal impacts of row-crop farms and commercial fishing.

Benoit Anquetil — strategy and technology lead for Cargill’s animal nutrition business — called developing new sources of protein a “long-term opportunit­y.”

“Sustainabl­e protein is a key challenge, which is why Cargill is evaluating the viability of insects as part of the solution to nourish the world,” Anquetil said.

People tend to pivot from grain-and plant-based diets to meat-based meals as they grow wealthier.

The problem is that as meat demand grows, feed production needs to grow faster.

It typically takes about two pounds of feed to produce a pound of chicken.

Expanded cultivatio­n of soybeans — the foundation of livestock and poultry rations for decades — is not a long-term solution because it contribute­s to deforestat­ion and overuse of harsh farm chemicals.

In addition, supplies of fishmeal — an aquacultur­e feed made from wild-caught fish and fish by-products — have fluctuated wildly with climactic cycles, overfishin­g and regulation to prevent it.

Nutritioni­sts and scientists have long touted insect consumptio­n for humans as a sustainabl­e and cheap source of protein, but snacking on bugs is a stomach-churning prospect for people in many countries and cultures.

Introducin­g insect protein further down the food chain may be more palatable.

The bug business still has a few hurdles ahead — like the yuck factor, even when the insects are fed to animals.

Regulators will also need to be convinced that ground-up bugs won’t introduce new toxins into the food supply.

“They are considered filth in the food system,” said Virginia Emery, CEO of Beta Hatch, which grows mealworms above an auto body shop near Seattle-tacoma Airport.

FEEDING BUGS TO FISH Cargill conducted an insect-based feed trial on poultry in 2015, but the company’s efforts with insects have since focused on bolstering its growing aquacultur­e business, where demand for alternativ­e proteins is most acute. Beta Hatch is chasing the same market. The small company’s mealworms — larvae of the mealworm beetle — will likely end up as fish food as Emery expands her business with the help of an investment

HIGH IN PROTEIN, FAT Insect farmers grow black soldier fly larvae and mealworms because they are docile, easy to grow and high in protein and digestible fat.

Mealworms can be grown with little water and studies have shown they can “rescue” nutrients by consuming grains not fit for livestock production without passing on harmful toxins.

Black soldier fly larvae also contain high levels of calcium and iron and can feed on a broad array of food waste.

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