Protix has announced the results of a new Life Cyle Assessment (LCA) conducted by DIL. The LCA was carried out on Protix products which are based on the black solider fly (BSF), and the results showed that the products had positive effects in terms of environmental footprint.
Protix, one of the global leaders in insect ingredients for feed and food, has unveiled the results of a new Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) conducted by the German Institute of Food Technologies (Deutsches Institut für Lebensmitteltechnik, DIL e.V.). The figures follow on from numbers published in an earlier assessment conducted in 2022, and demonstrate that Protix’s black soldier fly ingredients have positive effects in terms of environmental footprint.
Driven by its mission to help feed the growing global world population while taking good care of our planet, Protix works to further reduce the footprint of its ingredients for pet food, animal feed and fertilisers. The improved results are driven by continuous improvement across operations, genetics and nutritional science, the company states.
Kees Aarts, CEO of Protix, comments: “We take pride in leading innovations within our industry on a pathway to low-footprint-no-footprint proteins. With our previous LCA, we shared the vision that the environmental footprint of our black soldier fly ingredients could be reduced and we have lived up to that promise: the latest DIL figures once again demonstrate an improvement in the footprint of our Protix ingredients. We look forward to translating these LCA numbers into new commercial opportunities to help our customers produce better and greener.”
LCA RESULTS:
– ProteinX® insect meal reduces CO2 emissions by 78% compared with poultry meal (ProteinX: 0.832 kg CO2 eq; poultry meal: 3.8 kg CO2 eq). Poultry meal is often used in pet food and livestock feed. Compared to soy protein concentrate, an ingredient often used in aquaculture, ProteinX lowers CO2 emissions by as much as 89% (ProteinX: 0.832 kg CO2 eq; soy protein concentrate: 7.5 kg CO2 eq).
– LipidX® insect fat dramatically reduces land use, using 99.9% less than coconut oil (LipidX: 0.0102 m2 land use and coconut oil: 12.98 m2 land use). Coconut oil is commonly used as a fat source in livestock and aquaculture feed as well as in pet food.
– PureeX® insect meat uses a staggering 99.8% less water than poultry meat (PureeX at 0.098 m3 and poultry meat at 61.13 kg m3). Poultry meat is commonly used in pet food as a high moisture protein source.
– Protix’s insect frass shows only 0.01 kg CO2 eq. per kilogram of product.
– Larvae, used as feed for livestock, show 0.198 kg CO2 eq. per kilogram of product.
DATA TO COUNT ON
Protix underlines that it understands the importance of a robust scientific foundation for its products. The company is heavily invested in substantiating its findings and sharing data that manufacturers can translate into compelling claims.
This latest LCA was conducted by DIL, the German Institute of Food Technologies. This is a private, non-profit research provider with around 150 member companies from the food industry and related fields. As in the previous LCA, the results are based on the established and proven IMPACT 2002+ methodology. To further support the robustness of the findings, the results were compared against benchmark results from literature and relevant databases.
MAKING A REAL DIFFERENCE
However, Protix notes that its mission extends beyond the numbers and methodologies. The company is driven to create genuine, meaningful change in the food system. The data were taken from the year 2023, with the plant running at designed capacity. Protix is uniquely positioned to calculate with real production data from an industrial-scale facility operating at full capacity. The company adds that eEvery kilogram of its products used in pet food, animal feed, or organic fertiliser represents a tangible step towards a healthier planet, for Protix, its customers, and all of us.
WINGS OF POWER
The LCA was carried out on Protix products which are based on the black solider fly (BSF). Protix stated that it selected the BSF as its preferred and sole source of protein following in-depth research in the company’s infancy, 15 years ago. The BSF was found to be a superior source of protein for a raft of reasons. Essentially, the black soldier fly is one of nature’s most efficient upcyclers.
While these latest LCA data relate directly to Protix insects derived from larvae of the black soldier fly, they also shine a light on exciting potential for the insect industry as a whole to reduce the environmental impact of feed and food.
A HIGH-FLYING FUTURE
There is growing interest in insects as a sustainable source of protein. Protix explained that it remains at the forefront of developments with new production facilities and international expansion high on the agenda.
Aarts concludes: “This is an exciting time for change in the pet food, animal feed and fertiliser industries and we are scaling up our operations to meet demand. We are confident that we can achieve further outstanding figures in the future as we invest in improved genetics and build on our already deep knowledge of insect farming. When feedstock legislation changes, this will be a further driver of a lower footprint for our beloved black soldier fly. A tiny creature, but an impactful eco-warrior.”