ADM third feed-premix plant in China to be completed in 2015

Keyword:
Publish time: 7th November, 2013      Source: www.cnchemicals.com
Information collection and data processing:  CCM     For more information, please contact us
   


November 7, 2013

   

   

ADM third feed-premix plant in China to be completed in 2015

   

   

   

   


Archer Daniels Midland Company is building a new feed-premix plant in Nanjing, eastern China, bringing the total number of facilities in the company''s Chinese premix network to three by the first half of 2015.

   

   

ADM will manufacture an estimated 30,000 tonnes of premix products per year at the Nanjing facility, which will also provide 80,000 tonnes of additional capacity for the production of complete feeds and concentrates. The plant is expected to employ about 150 people.

   

   

The Nanjing plant will manufacture nutritional feed premixes that can be added to animal rations to promote good health and optimal growth. Such premix formulas typically contain various vitamins and minerals, amino acids such as lysine and threonine, and other ingredients.

   

   

"ADM is committed to helping China meet its goals for food security and safety, and our plant in Nanjing is part of this commitment," said Brent Fenton, president, ADM Animal Nutrition. "As the country''s population continues growing and personal incomes rise further, the nation''s demand for meat is expected to increase. In this environment, our decades of experience in producing animal feeds and feed ingredients-coupled with our insistence on consistent, high-quality products-will serve China''s livestock producers well."

   

   

The Nanjing facility complements ADM''s existing premix plants, which are located in Tianjin and Dalian in northern China. The company also has a tolling relationship with a third-party feed distribution facility in Chengdu, in the country''s southwest. Fenton says these facilities are the first in what ADM envisions as a national premix network.

   
   
ADM''s feed premix plants are part of a broader effort to help China further its food-security goals.
   

   

The company is collaborating with the China Agricultural University on a research programme to develop efficient and lower-cost feed programmes for dairy cattle using corn processing co-products such as distillers grains and locally grown corn stover-the stalks, cobs and leaves left on farmers'' fields after the harvest. The programme is run on the basis that feeding cattle a mix of processed crop residues and co-products can free up grain for other uses and reduce the use of imported hay and other forages.