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Title: Cleaner production of meat processing


1
Cleaner production of meat processing
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  • Dr. Willem Marsman
  • DVM

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2
Meat processing
  • Is the generic term used to describe the industry
  • Abattoir/slaughterhouses
  • Meatpacking plants-undertake slaughter and
    carcass dressing but also the further processing
    of meat products and byproducts

3
Focus of this guide
  • Since livestock slaughter along with its
    associated activities contributes the most to
    pollution, this guide focuses on abattoir
  • Basic principles are independent of plant
    capacity
  • Guide refers to cattle and pigs however
    principles will apply also to other species

4
Cleaner production
  • Application of cleaner production to medium and
    large scale abattoirs
  • An increasing trend in many countries is for
    abattoirs to incorporate rendering facilities to
    process solid by-products materials into meat
    meal and tallow

5
Units of production
  • Per head of livestock slaughtered
  • Tonne of live carcass weight LCW
  • Tonne of dressed weight-DW
  • Tonne of hot standard carcass weight-HSCW

6
Process overviewpigs
  • Pre-handling of pigs, generally fasted for a day
    to reduce the amount of intestinal contents
  • Stunning and bleeding
  • Dehairing and finishing
  • Evisceration and splitting
  • By products processing
  • rendering

7
Products and by products from slaughter of 90 kg
pig
  • Boned meat 56.6kg- 64
  • Inedible material for rendering 18 kg-20(bones,
    fat, head, hair, condemned offal etc)
  • edible material (tongue, liver ,heart, kidneys,
    trotters)
  • 9 kg-10
  • blood 2.7 kg-3
  • miscellaneous (stomach contents shrinkage, blood
    loss etc. 2.7 kg -3

8
Process overviewcattle
  • Live weight can vary from 250 kg to 600kg
    depending on the age and breed of the animal
  • As a guide heifers 250-300kgcows
    350-400kgsteers 400-600 kg
  • Processing rates in the United States now average
    350 head per hour

9
Continue cattle-basic process
  • Pre-handling of cattle-animals are rested for one
    or two days before slaughter
  • Stunning and bleeding
  • Dressing and hide removal
  • Evisceration
  • Cutting and boning (also hot boning)
  • Inspection
  • By-products

10
Products and by-products from the slaughter of
400 kg beef cattle
  • Boned meat-152 kg-40
  • Inedible material for rendering 155 kg-39
  • Hide 36 kg-7
  • Edible offal 19 kg-5
  • Blood 12kg- 3
  • Miscellaneous (paunch manure, shrinkage ,blood
    losses etc.) 26 kg-6

11
By product processing
  • By products can contribute significantly to the
    profitability of an abattoir since they have a
    commercially value
  • If animal by product are not used effectively a
    valuable source of revenue is lost. And the added
    and increasing cost of disposal of these products
    is incurred by the company
  • Also from an environmental perspective
    utilization of by product reduces the overall
    environmental load of the process

12
Continue by-productinclude
  • Edible offal
  • Edible fat for shorthening/margarine/sweets/chuwin
    g gum
  • Bone soup consumption or manufacture of buttons,
    knife handles and bone meal
  • Blood for human consumption and for animal feed,
    pharmaceuticals and food additives (emulsifiers,
    stabilizers, clarifiers, nutritional additives,
    egg albumin substitute) fertilizer, animal feeds,
    industrial application
  • Glycerin for numerous industrial uses as
    nitroglycerine, ointment bases ,solvents ,food
    preservatives and plasticizers

13
Continue by-products
  • Intestines for sausages casings, strings of
    musical instruments and surgical ligatures
  • Gelatin for confectionery items, ice cream and
    jellied food products
  • Rennin for cheese making
  • Pharmaceutical products
  • Livestock feed (high in protein, fat, minerals)
  • Pet food and feed for fish farming

14
Continue by-product
  • Hides and skin for leather, fur or leather goods
  • Inedible fats for use in industrial products such
    as tires, lubricants, insecticides and germicides
  • Hair for brushes, felt, rugs, upholstery, plaster
    binding and insulation
  • glue

15
Products and by-products from the slaughter of
400 kg beef cattle
  • Boned meat-152 kg-40
  • Inedible material for rendering 155 kg-39
  • Hide 36 kg-7
  • Edible offal 19 kg-5
  • Blood 12kg- 3
  • Miscellaneous (paunch manure, shrinkage, blood
    losses etc.) 26 kg-6

16
Environmental impacts
  • High consumption of water
  • The discharge of high strength effluent
  • Consumption of energy
  • Noise, odor, solid waste

17
Water consumption
  • Hygiene standards
  • Watering and washing livestock
  • Cleaning process equipment, work areas, carcasses

18
Effluent discharge contains
  • (A high level of organic material,
    fat,nitrogen,phosphorus and salt)
  • Blood
  • Fat
  • Manure
  • Undigested stomach contents
  • Cleaning agents

19
Continue environmental issues
  • If irrigation is not managed correctly, dissolved
    salts contained in the effluent can adversely
    affect soil structure and caused salinity
    problems
  • Nitrogen and phosphorus can also leach to
    underlying ground water and affect its quality
  • When directly into water bodies the high levels
    of organic matter can deplete oxygen levels and
    thus degrade water quality

20
Environmental continue
  • Reception of livestock
  • Truck washing
  • Cattle washing
  • Effluent containing manure wastes
  • High water consumption
  • noise

21
Environmental continue
  • Stunning and bleeding
  • Effluent with high organic load, especially when
    blood is discharged

22
Environmental continue
  • Hide treatment pigs
  • Energy consumption for hot water used for
    scalding
  • Generation of putrescible by-products
  • Effluent with high content of organic matter

23
Environmental continue
  • Splitting and evisceration
  • Energy consumption for equipment sterilization
  • Generation of putrescible by-products
  • Effluent with organic load

24
Environment Continue
  • refrigeration
  • High energy consumption
  • Fugitive losses of refrigerants, e.g. CFCs or
    ammonia

25
Environment continue
  • Cutting and boning
  • Electricity consumption
  • Generation of putrescible by-products
  • Energy consumption for equipment sterilization

26
Environment continue
  • Casing and offal processing
  • Effluent with very high organic load
  • Very high water consumption

27
Environment continue
  • rendering
  • Effluent with very high high organic load
  • Potential for odor generation
  • High energy consumption

28
Environment continue
  • cleaning
  • High water consumption
  • Consumption of chemicals
  • Large volumes of effluent with high organic load

29
Environment continue
  • Energy consumption-thermal energy (steam and hot
    water)-electricity (machinery, refrigeration,
    ventilation,lighting compressed air)
  • Byproducts-odor-high risk materials
  • Air emission-air pollutions include oxides of
    nitrogen and sulphur and suspended particulate
    matter

30
Environment continue
  • Odor, biological treatment systems are another
    common source of odor-upsetting microbiological
    balance of the system, resulting in the release
    of hydrogen sulphide and other odorous compounds
  • Refrigerants-chlorofluorocarbons (fugitive loss
    to atmosphere-ozon depletion)-replacement with
    ammonia is important
  • noise

31
Environmental indicatorswater consumption
  • A factor that affects water consumption is
    cleaning practices ,plants which produce meat for
    export often have stricter hygiene requirements
    and therefore may consume more water for cleaning
    and sanitizing
  • Slaughter, evisceration and casing and offal
    processing tend to account for a large proportion
    of total water use

32
Environmental indicatorswater consumption
  • Water consumption is 225 l/head for pigs as
    average and 860 l/head for cattle as average

33
Environment indicatorseffluent discharge
  • high organic loads due to presence of blood, fat,
    manure and undigested stomach contents
  • High levels of fat
  • Fluctuations in pH due to caustic and acid
    cleaning agents
  • High levels of nitrogen, phosphorus and salt
  • High temperature

34
Environment indicatorseffluent discharge
  • The concentration of organic matter is a key
    indicator of effluent quality and is commonly
    expressed as chemical oxygen demand (COD) or
    5-day biochemical oxygen (BOD5)

35
Environmental indicatorseffluent discharge
  • Animal fats are long chain fatty acids and
    glycerol, collectively referred as fats, oils and
    greases
  • Fats of animals are generally biodegradable and
    have high specific BOD5 ,more than 2 g BOD5 per
    gram lipid
  • Nitrogen in abattoirs effluent occurs mainly in
    the form of ammonia due to the breakdown of
    proteinaceous materials into amino acids and the
    ammonia, however the nature of the ammonia
    species present depends on the ph. Therefore
    nitrogen levels in abattoir effluent are commonly
    expressed as total nitrogen

36
Environment indicators effluent discharge
  • BOD (mg/l) pig
  • cattle
  • COD (mg/L) pig
  • cattle
  • Suspended solids (mg/l)
  • pig
  • cattle
  • Total nitrogen (mg/L)
  • pig
  • cattle
  • 1250
  • 2000
  • 2500
  • 4000
  • 700
  • 1600
  • 150
  • 180

37
Environmental indicatorseffluent discharge
  • Total phosphorus (mg/L) pig
  • cattle
  • gtOil and grease(fat)
  • (mg/l) pig
  • cattle
  • gtpH pig/cattle
  • 25
  • 150
  • 270
  • 7.2

38
Environment discharge
  • Organic matter- originates from all areas where
    water comes into contact with carcasses, manure,
    offal and blood etc.
  • Blood- also the most significant source of
    nitrogen
  • Phosphorus originates from manure and undigested
    contents and blood processing within the
    rendering plant

39
Environment continueeffluent discharge
  • Salt- originate from manure and undigested
    stomach contents and also from rendering and
    pickling processes and perhaps raw water
  • Fat originates from trimmings that are allowed to
    fall on the floor and from carcass washing

40
Environment continueeffluent discharge
  • At those plants where rendering occurs the
    rendering plant is generally the largest single
    source of effluent contamination.
  • Rendering typically contributes about 60 of a
    plant total organic load but only 5-10 of the
    total volume

41
Environment indicatorseffluent discharge per head
  • BOD5 (kg/head)-pig
  • cattle
  • Total nitrogen (kg/head) -pig
  • cattle
  • Total phosphorus (kg/head) -pig
  • cattle
  • 0.5-20
  • 1-5
  • 0.075-0.25
  • 0.25-1.0
  • 0.015-0.03
  • 0.030-0.1

42
Energy consumption
  • If rendering and pig scalding occur at an
    abattoir this will add substantially to overall
    energy consumption
  • About 80-85 of an abattoir total energy is for
    thermal energy
  • Fuel used for steam production in boilers is
    typically coal or fuel oil. However the use of
    natural gas and liquid petroleum gas is
    increasing due to environmental pressure to burn
    cleaner fuels

43
Energy consumption continue
  • It is also possible to recover waste heat from
    high temperature rendering processes to heat
    water
  • The remaining 15-20 of an abattoir energy
    consumption is provided by electricity,
    refrigeration accounts for a significant of
    electricity use

44
Energy consumption continue
  • A useful indicator of plant performance energy
    use is expressed per unit of production
  • An indication is for pig 27kW.h/head and for
    cattle 61kW.h/head

45
Benchmarks
  • Water consumption
  • Energy consumption
  • Organic load in effluent (COD or BOD5)
  • Nitrogen loads
  • Phosphorus loads

46
benchmark
  • The lack of environmental benchmarking in meat
    industry is thought to be due to the considerable
    variation in production processes and scales of
    operation within the industry.
  • No widely recognized standard unit of production
  • In order to compare one process with another, or
    to compare a process with a specified benchmark
    the scale, age ,efficiency and type of process
    should be similar to enable sensible comparison

47
Benchmark for pig abattoirs 90 kg
  • Water-L/animal
  • Heat and electricity-kW.h/animal
  • BOD5-g/animal
  • Traditional1400
  • Average700
  • Best available300
  • Traditional125
  • Average50
  • Best available30
  • Traditional 2500
  • Average 1000
  • Best available 500

48
Benchmark for cattle abattoir-250 kg cattle
  • Water L/animal
  • Heat/electricity- kW.h/animal
  • BOD5-g/animal
  • Traditional 5000
  • Average 2500
  • Best available1000
  • Traditional 300
  • Average 125
  • Best available70
  • Traditional 5500
  • Average 2500
  • Best available1200

49
(No Transcript)
50
Cleaner production opportunities
  • Focus on
  • Reducing the consumption of resources (water and
    energy)
  • Increasing product yields
  • Reducing the volume and pollutant load of
    effluent discharges
  • Individual operators practices

51
general
  • General housekeeping
  • 1. are work areas tidy and uncluttered to avoid
    accidents
  • 2. is there a good inventory control of
    consumables such as cleaning chemicals, packaging
    materials, food additives etc.to avoid waste
  • 3. are employees aware of the environmental
    aspects of company operations and their personal
    responsibilities
  • 4.are staff trained in good cleaning practices
  • 5.is there a schedule for regular maintenance
    activities to avoid inefficiencies and breakdown

52
Water consumption
  • Water saving ideas
  • 1. is dry cleaning of trucks undertaken prior to
    washing with water
  • 2. are high pressure ,low volume spray nozzles
    used
  • 3.is high pressure used rather than high volume
    for cleaning surfaces
  • 4 are automatic operated scalding chambers used
    rather than scalding tanks for the dehairing of
    pigs
  • 5.are offal transport systems used that avoid or
    minimize the use of water.
  • 6.are dry dumping techniques used that avoid or
    minimize the use of water for the processing of
    cattle paunches and pig stomachs, instead of wet
    dumping techniques

53
water consumption
  • 7.is there a reuse of relatively clean waste
    water from cooling systems ,vacuum pumps etc. for
    washing livestock
  • 8.is there a reuse of final rinse waters from
    paunch and casing washing for other non critical
    cleaning steps in the casing department
  • 9.is there a reuse of waste water from slaughter
    floor ,carcass washing, viscera tables and hand
    washbasins for the washing of inedible products
  • 10.is there a reuse of cooling water from the
    singeing process for other application in the
    pig dehairing area
  • 11.is there a reuse of the final rinse from
    cleaning operations for the initial rinse on the
    following day
  • 12.is there a use of dry cleaning techniques to
    pre-clean process areas and floor before washing
    with water.
  • 13.are automatic control systems used to operate
    the flow of water in hand wash stations and knife
    sterilizers

54
Water consumption
  • Analyze water use patterns by installing water
    meters and recording water consumption
  • Identify leaks and other areas of unnecessary
    waste
  • Installing automatic shut off equipment and flow
    restrictors.Automatic control of water use

55
Water consumption
  • The optimum rate can be determined by
    investigating each process in detail and
    undertaking trials
  • For example defrost water from refrigeration
    units could be reused for non critical
    applications.
  • Even waste water from slaughter floor, wash
    basins, knife and implement sterilizers and
    carcass washing could be reused for example for
    stockyard cleaning, hide cleaning and livestock
    washing as long fresh water (potable) is used for
    the final livestock rinse

56
water consumption
  • Effluent discharge quality standards will become
    tighter

57
effluent
  • Reducing effluent loads
  • 1. is there a segregation of blood by designing
    suitable blood collection facilities and allowing
    sufficient time for bleeding, typically seven
    minutes
  • 2.is there a sweep up of solids materials done
    for use as byproducts, instead of washing them
    down the drain
  • 3.are drains fit with screens and /or traps to
    prevent solid materials from entering the
    effluent system
  • 4. is offal transport systems used that avoid or
    minimize the use of water.

58
effluent
  • 5.are water sprays used with a pressure of less
    than 10 bar for carcass washing to avoid removing
    fat from surface
  • 6.are dry cleaning techniques used to pre-clean
    process areas and floors before washing with
    water
  • 7.are high strength effluent streams such as
    rendering effluent and waste waters from casings
    and paunch washing segregated

59
effluent
  • Efforts to reduce water consumption will also
    result in reduced effluent volumes
  • Opportunities for reducing the pollutant load of
    abattoir effluent principally focus on avoiding
    the discharge as blood, undigested stomach
    contents, fat and scraps of meat
  • Blood recovery can degrease organic loads by
    approximately 40

60
energy
  • Energy saving
  • 1.is there a switch off program implemented and
    are sensors installed to turn off power down
    lights and equipment when not in use
  • 2.is insulation improved on heating and cooling
    systems and pipe work
  • 3.are scald tanks insulated and covered
  • 4.is there a recover of waste heat from effluent
    streams, vents,exhaust and compressors

61
energy
  • 5.is there a recovery of evaporative energy in
    the rendering process, using multi effect
    evaporators
  • 6. is there a leak free compressed air system
    maintained
  • 7.is there a favor of more efficient equipment
  • 8. is maintenance improved to maximize energy
    efficiency of equipment
  • 9. is there an optimal combustion efficiency on
    boilers
  • 10.are steam leaks eliminated

62
energy
  • Simple house keeping and optimization of existing
    processes can give significant reductions
  • Replacing fuel oil or coal with cleaner fuels
  • For some plants it may also feasible to recover
    methane from anaerobic digestion of high strength
    effluent streams to supplement fuel supplies

63
By products
  • By products
  • 1.are all by products segregated
  • 2.are by products not contaminated with water or
    material that would limit or prevent their use
  • 3.are by products stored correctly to maintain
    quality and maximize the viability of reuse
    opportunities

64
Live stock reception
  • Trucks are washed and sometimes disinfected
  • Animals fasted 1-2 days to reduce quantity of
    stomach contents
  • Holding prior to de- stress animals
  • Pigs are susceptible to heat stress and therefore
    sprinkler systems are used
  • Livestock are washed

65
Live stock
  • livestock reception
  • -input
  • live pig 100kg
  • water for cleaning 15 liter
  • bedding if used 2.5kg
  • live cattle 250 kg
  • water for cleaning 75 liter
  • bedding if used 7.5 kg
  • -

66
Live stock
  • Output
  • live pig 100kg
  • waste water 15 liter
  • BOD 0.02 kg
  • Solid waste 1.5 kg
  • Live cattle 250 kg
  • Waste water 75 liter
  • BOD 0.1 kg
  • Solid waste 5 kg

67
Effluent comparison previous slides
  • -input
  • live pig 100kg
  • water for cleaning 15 liter
  • bedding if used 2.5kg
  • live cattle 250 kg
  • water for cleaning 75 liter
  • bedding if used 7.5 kg
  • Output
  • live pig 100kg
  • waste water 15 liter
  • BOD 0.02 kg
  • Solid waste 1.5 kg
  • Live cattle 250 kg
  • Waste water 75 liter
  • BOD 0.1 kg
  • Solid waste 5 kg

68
effluent
  • For truck washing water should be used only after
    dry cleaning
  • Manual cleaning of livestock should be restricted
    to those that needed it.A 20-35 diameter hose
    fitted with a 9-10 mm nozzle will maximize
    efficiency
  • Screening of waste water can best be achieved
    using rotating screens or static run down screens

69
Stunning and bleedingpigs/cattle
  • -input
  • live pig 100kg
  • water 5 liter
  • carbon dioxide 0.16 kg
  • live cattle 250 kg
  • water 5 liter
  • -output
  • bled pig 95 kg
  • blood (assuming 80 recovery) 4kg
  • waste water 6 liter
  • BOD (blood loss)0.2 kg
  • Bled cattle carcass 238 kg
  • Blood (assuming 80 recovery) 10 kg
  • Waste water 7 liter
  • BOD (blood loss) 0.4 kg

70
Stunning and bleeding
  • Blood constitutes the highest pollution
    load,blood has high organic load with its organic
    load equivalent estimated to be 0.14-0.18 kg BOD5
    per kg and blood is main contributor to nitrogen
    loads in effluent
  • The presence of water reduces the efficiency of
    coagulation processes and if blood is to be dried
    increases the energy required to evaporate the
    water content

71
Stunning and bleeding continue
  • After blood ,fat is the next most important
    contaminant in effluent, fat blinds screens will
    be blocked and greater use of hot water to clean
    them
  • Two way drain in bleeding areas with removable
    plugs/valves should be installed and proper
    collecting possibilities for only collecting
    blood
  • Blood should be chilled quickly when used for by
    product

72
Hide treatment pigs
  • -input
  • bled pig carcass 95 kg
  • water 60 liter
  • oil 0.6 liter
  • gas 0.5 m3(if used instead of oil)
  • -outputs
  • de-haired pig carcass 93 kg
  • waste water 60 liter
  • BOD 0.3 kg
  • Pig hair 1kg
  • Scrapings 1 kg

73
Hide treatment pigs
  • Water consumption high, waste water contained
    high level of organic matter, scalding tanks have
    temperatures of up to 75 degrees Celsius which if
    passed can melt fat
  • Consumes lot of energy
  • Insulate scalding tanks, waste water should pass
    a sedimentation tank, interceptor trap or sand
    trap before discharge (investment high)

74
Hide treatment pigs
  • Automatic operated scalding chambers use less
    water, water consumption can be reduced by 50-70
    (investment high)
  • Hair collecting is essential before it enters
    drainage system
  • Singeing oven must be insulated and recovery of
    heat, use of solenoid switches

75
Hide removal and dressing cattle
  • -input
  • bled cattle carcass 238 kg
  • water 5 liter
  • -output
  • dehided cattle carcass 207 kg
  • hide 15 kg
  • heads,hoofs,tail etc 16 kg
  • fleshing 3 kg
  • waste water 5 liter

76
Hide removal and dressing cattle
  • If hides are sent to tannery without
    fleshing,hides are packed unwashed in
    salt,fleshing are made up of fat and flesh and
    represent about 15 of the weight of the hide
  • Cattle hide accounts for 5-9 of the live weight
    of beef cattle

77
Hide removal and dressing of cattle
  • When hides are preserved by salting,saturated
    brine or salt crystals are used. Up to 4 liters
    of saturated brine can be lost for each hide
    treated. These spent brine can pose a substantial
    disposal problems
  • Typical consumption of salt for conserving hides
    is about 350 kg per tonne of hide,if stored 6
    weeks or less salt can be reduced to 150 kg etc.

78
Evisceration and spitting
  • -input
  • dehaired pig carcass 93 kg
  • water 40 liter
  • dehided cattle carcass 207 kg
  • water 100 liter
  • -output
  • split pig carcass 74 kg
  • intestinal tract 10 kg
  • plucks and edible organs 3 kg
  • by-products 5.5. kg
  • waste water 40 liter
  • BOD 0.05 kg
  • Split cattle carcass 125 kg
  • Intestinal tract 60 kg
  • Plucks and edible organs 9 kg
  • By-products 12 kg
  • Waste water 100 liter
  • BOD 0.12 kg

79
Evisceration and splitting
  • Carcass washing can be a significant source of
    water waste and effluent contamination. In manual
    operations there is a tendency to use more water
    than is necessary, automatic carcass washing
    units sprays are recommendable
  • Water pressure greater than 10 bar for carcass
    washing can remove fat from surface and water
    temperatures greater than 30 Celsius can further
    exacerbate fat loss

80
casing
  • -input
  • pig casing 10 kg
  • water 50-100 liter
  • cattle casing 30 kg
  • water 300-500 liter
  • -output
  • washed casings 10 kg
  • waste water 50-100 liter
  • BOD 0.1-0.3 kg
  • Washed casings cattle 30 kg
  • Waste water 300-500 liter
  • BOD 1-1.5 kg

81
casings
  • Water consumption for casing processing is very
    high and can be up to 20 of total water
    consumption
  • Fasting is essential
  • An assessment should be made if casing cleaning
    is a profitable choice, perhaps better sending
    the empty intestines for inedible rendering
  • New techniques for emptying guts sets for pigs
    without use of water

82
Paunch washing cattle
  • Input
  • Cattle paunch 50 kg
  • Water 200 liter
  • -output
  • washed cattle paunch 10 kg
  • paunch manure 40 kg
  • waste water 200 liter
  • BOD 0.5 kg

83
Paunch washing cattle
  • Water consumption very high
  • Paunch manure contains high concentrations of
    organic solids and other pollutants. BOD5
    concentrations have been estimated to be about
    50000mg/l
  • The undigested solids are not easily degraded in
    biological treatment systems and build up as
    sludge in the system reducing overall treatment
    capacity
  • An assessment should be made of whether paunch
    washing is a profitable choice

84
Paunch washing
  • It was estimated that converting a wet dump
    system to a two step system could reduce the
    total loading of a typical beef abattoir by
    18-33 for total solids,16-31 for COD,9-18 for
    total nitrogen and 20-46 for total Phosphorus

85
Paunch manure
  • Is a ideal medium for composting or vermiculture
    (worm composting) along with other waste
    materials.
  • After composting it can be used or marketed as a
    fertilizer or soil conditioner
  • Prior composting is preferable before paunch
    manure is spread directly onto agriculture land

86
rendering
  • -input
  • raw materials (offal,dead animals) 1000 kg-
    approximately 60 of the weight of the raw
    materials is water ,which ends up as condensate
    waste water as a result of the rendering process)
  • fuel oil for steam generation 60 kg
  • electricity 70 kW.h
  • water for boiler 150-200 liter
  • water for condenser 200-500 liter
  • water for cleaning 200-300 liter
  • -outputs
  • bone meal 280 kg
  • fat 110 kg
  • waste water 1000-1600 liter
  • COD 5 kg
  • Total nitrogen 0.6 kg

87
rendering
  • Commodities as meat meal,bone meal, tallow and
    also pet food
  • Simple batch cooking in which fat is removed by
    hydraulic presses or continuous systems

88
rendering
  • Pre-crushed material
  • In rendering cooker-high temperature which
    evaporate water and sterilize it
  • Fat allowed to drain from mixture in percolator
    pan and remainder of the fat is pressed out
    mechanically either in a hydraulic press (batch
    process) or continuous in a screw process
  • The press cake is milled to produce meat meal and
    bone meal
  • Fat is further refined to remove impurities by
    precipitation, centrifugation etc

89
rendering
  • Effluent of rendering contains very loads of
    organic material
  • Compromises condensate from dry rendering, stick
    waters from wet rendering, decanters and blood
    coagulation and from polisher centrifuges

90
rendering
  • Energy consumption is very high
  • Rendering materials can cause extremely bad odors
  • Raw materials should received promptly, delays in
    processing result in poor quality raw materials
    which lead to lower yields, lower quality
    products and difficulties in processing raw
    materials
  • Rendering materials should be kept cool at about
    10-15 Celsius or lower

91
rendering
  • Heat from cookers can be recovered in multiple
    effect evaporators and used to preheat raw
    material, this can reduce energy consumption from
    about 60kg to 35 -40 kg oil per tonne of raw
    material
  • The effluent stream from rendering along with
    other high strength streams as paunch and stomach
    dumping could be collected and treated separately

92
rendering
  • Segregated high strength effluent streams could
    be anaerobically digested to produce methane rich
    biogas

93
cleaning
  • Cleaning accounts for 20-25 of total water
    consumption
  • Waste water from cleaning contains a high organic
    load as well detergents and disinfectants
  • Dry cleaning is essential before washing with
    water
  • Industrial vacuum cleaners have been used in
    boning rooms

94
cleaning
  • Hoses should be fitted with spray nozzles,
    pressure of 25-30 bar
  • Flat jet nozzles should be used, spray angles of
    60
  • First rinse with cold water and than warm water
  • Detergents and disinfectants should be monitored
    (concentration, new types of detergents which are
    more environmental friendly are recommended)

95
cleaning
  • Chemical sanitizers can be more effective in
    bacteriological control less damaging to the
    building and safer for personnel than large
    quantities of hot water
  • Regular maintenance of spray nozzle wear is
    essential
  • Double insulated knife sterilizers reduce the
    rate of overflow required to maintain the
    required temperature. For a 3 liter bowl this can
    mean an overflow rate of 15 l/hr compared with
    36l/h for conventional sterilizers

96
Compressed air
  • Usually compressors are electrically powered and
    cooled with water or air.
  • It is important to check the compressed air
    system frequently
  • Cooling water can be recirculated via a cooling
    tower, alternatively the cooling water can be
    reused for other purposes

97
Steam production
  • Steam is produced in a boiler and distributed
    throughout the plant through insulated pipes.
    Condensate is returned to condensate tank, from
    where it is circulated as boiler feed water
    unless it is used for heating in the production
    process

98
Steam production
  • Other parameters are pressure, fuel type,
    maintenance, operation
  • Combustion of fuel oil results in emissions of
    carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide, nitrogen
    oxides,polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
    (carcinogenic!)
  • Some fuels contains 3-5 sulphur and result in
    sulphur dioxide emissions of 50-85 kg per 1000
    liters of fuel oil-
  • Sulphur dioxide converts to sulphuric acid
    resulting in formation of acid rain
  • Nitrogen oxides can result in lung irritation

99
Steam production
  • If oil is spilled it can cause serious pollution
    of soil
  • For inefficiently operated boilers the amount of
    feed water required can be excessive and need of
    additional boiler chemicals and increased fuel
    consumption
  • Fuel oil with less sulphur is more expensive
    however the efficiency of boiler is increased
    and emission less

100
Steam production
  • Purchasing an oversize boiler for the sake of
    contingency may not really necessary
  • Proper insulation can reduce heat loss

101
Water supply
  • Treatment normally consists of aeration and
    filtration through gravel or sand and
    chlorination
  • Energy efficient pumps should be installed

102
Refrigeration and cooling
  • All cooling systems should be closed circuit
    systems and free of leaks
  • If CFC based refrigerants are used there is a
    risk that refrigeration gases will be emitted to
    the atmosphere, contributing to the depletion of
    ozone layer
  • Insulating cold rooms and pipes is essential
  • Self closing doors are recommended

103
Cleaner production
  • Planning and organization
  • Pre-assessment
  • Assessment
  • Evaluation and feasibility study
  • Implementation and continuation

104
Cleaner production of meat processing-end
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