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World’s largest onion processor converts waste into electricity

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2016-04-21  Views: 3
Core Tip: The international participants of the Onion Study Tour, organised by breeding company Hazera, visited the world’s largest onion processor on Monday: Gills Onions in Oxnard, USA.
The international participants of the Onion Study Tour, organised by breeding company Hazera, visited the world’s largest onion processor on Monday: Gills Onions in Oxnard, USA. Weekly the Californian company produces no less than 500 tonnes of peeled and cut onion products for American retail, industry and food service.

1,200 hectare of onions
Processing company Gills Onions originated from cultivation company Rio Farms in 1982. This cultivation company, with its 7,000 hectares of spinach, (romaine) lettuce, celery, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, bell pepper and tomato, belongs to the largest vegetable growers from ‘the West.’ The onion cultivation contains approximately 1,200 hectare with year-round cultivation in Fresno, Imperial, Kern and Monterey.

For years, the problem was onion waste, for more than thirty per cent of the colossal onions are not suitable for processing into the final product. The company of David and Steve Gill has found a solution to this. The onion juices released will be converted into electricity. The pulp is designated cattle feed, and due to the shortage of grass because of the drought in California, demand for that is large as well.

Premium
The Gills Onions factory in Oxnard is one of the most state-of-the-art processing factories in the world. The peeling machines were supplied by Dofra/FTNON, and thus of Dutch origin. “We provide the highest quality products, and ask a higher price than is common for our premium product,” founder and manager Steve Gill told the international study group.

Zero Waste
As part of this strategy of minimising its CO2 footprint while at the same time guaranteeing safety and the highest quality, Gills Onions introduced the ambitious objective of ‘zero waste’ in 2009. Since then the onion juices from the waste are converted into biogas in the ‘Advanced Energy Recovery System’ for ultra-clean electricity that provides the factory in all of its electricity needs. This investment cost no less than 11 million dollars.

Steve Gill is proud of the achieved result, but sticks to his roots. “We have no intention of providing electricity throughout the region, because we are after all onion processors, and not a power plant.”

 
 
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