Sask. Food Centre’s new extruder funded

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Published: April 22, 2008

Equipment to pull new ingredients out of crops for the food and manufacturing sectors will be set up at the Saskatchewan Food Centre.

Saskatchewan MP Brad Trost announced almost $800,000 in funding Tuesday in Saskatoon, where the centre is based at the University of Saskatchewan, for investment in extruder equipment.

Extrusion is used to extract ingredients from cereals for products such as pasta or confectionery doughs, or low-density materials for such uses as puffy snack foods, breakfast cereals and gum.

The centre’s new extruder may also test oilseeds and plant-based materials to develop environment-friendly bio-polymers that could possibly replace petroleum-based plastics, the federal government said in a press release Tuesday.

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Spencer Harris , in the green shirt, speaks with attendees at the Nutrien Ag Solutions crop plots at Ag in Motion on July 16. Photo: Greg Berg

Interest in biological crop inputs continues to grow

It was only a few years ago that interest in alternative methods such as biologicals to boost a crop’s nutrient uptake seemed to spike in popularity. But according to Spencer Harris, senior vice-president of global ag retail for Nutrien Ag Solutions, biologicals are not all that new for Nutrien — the global ag retailer has been researching biological crop inputs for nearly two decades.

Using this equipment, the centre — which is operated by the university, the provincial ag department and the Saskatchewan Food Processors Association — can run pilot-scale processing tests on-site, as opposed to transporting material and personnel to the U.S. for such testing, the government said.

The technology can be used to test products for potential use in the pet, animal and aquaculture feed markets as well as food markets, the government added.

“This equipment will enable researchers to identify new ways to process Saskatchewan crops that could lead to new commercial products,” Trost said. The federal funding will flow through Western Economic Diversification Canada.

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