FEATUREDFOOD AND BEVERAGE

Efficiency the key to meeting environmental targets

The global food and beverage sector is under growing pressure to clean up its act and ensure its operations are as environmentally friendly as possible. Pumps form an integral part of production so how are they helping meet challenging government legislation?

Ambitious targets continue to be set in food and beverage manufacturing – for example in the UK, the Food and Drink Federation and the British Beer and Pub Association have both pledged to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2040 across production sites and their supply chain.

This is in a sector which is the fourth highest industrial energy user in the country according to a government report. Fans and pumps accounting for 12% of food and drink sector emissions and, according to the Carbon Trust, a fully loaded motor consumes its own purchase cost in electricity in 30 to 40 days of continuous running.

With pumps, a direct energy saving can be made by using more efficient motors such as an IE3 drive which can be retrofitted to existing technology. But motor choice is only part of the solution that pumps can bring to production.

Ultimate goal

The ultimate goal is a lean manufacturing operation realising optimum product yields while using fewer resources and, critically, a healthier bottom line.

Vipul Mistry, global product leader for nutrition and health, pumps at SPX Flow based in the US, said: “Energy consumption is at the top of customers’ minds so designing more efficient pumps is key.

“The total cost of ownership for the customer must be optimised for their particular process covering reliability, efficiency and productivity and keeping downtime to a minimum.

“For example, when using positive displacement pumps for viscous media we have to ensure there is less slip in the process through the way we design internal clearances to maximise efficiency which is important for the preservation of the product.”

SPX Flow has more than 25 innovation and design centres worldwide, offering support from food technologists, product specialists, process and production engineers, electricians and other experts working directly with customers.

“We stay connected to customers, solving problems and providing solutions to make sure their processes are achieving optimum performance and sustainability,” added Mistry.

New challenges

For example, new challenges for pumps in the food and beverage industry include processing of plant-based foods such as vegan cheese in response to consumer demand and producers turn to manufacturers to provide the specific expertise required in areas including pressure and viscosity.

Logically, the more viscous the media, the more energy will be required to process it. Significantly, UK-based Watson-Marlow Technology Group’s Masosine division’s sine pumps are not affected by viscosity in the same way as lobe pumps and require lower torque to drive them so can use smaller motors.

The sinusoidal rotor produces powerful suction with low shear, low pulsation and gentle handling of a broad range of viscous products without modification to the pump and with minimal effect on power requirements. Continuous flow ensures up to 50 per cent less energy usage compared with other pump types.

Smaller pumps are naturally more energy efficient but care must be taken to ensure they are up to the task. However, a US-based fruit juice manufacturer was able to select small sine pump instead of a larger lobe pump to transfer frozen fruit juice concentrate resulting in an US$11,000 saving in electricity costs as well as cutting annual CO2 emission by 33,880kg.

Product recovery

Meanwhile, according to French manufacturer Mouvex, savings created by product recovery far outstrip any energy saving initiatives. It claims cost savings can be up to 32 times greater than the yearly cost of the energy needed to run the pump. In a large production operation, that can result in millions of dollars of savings per year.

If a pump cannot strip suction or discharge production lines then there is a major environmental impact with more energy, water and chemicals required for cleaning along with higher levels of disposal of wastewater and residue.

Traditional pumps such as lobe and external circumferential piston (ECP) pumps, for example, do not possess the ability to clear lines while they also wear causing product slip and waste from leaks in seals.

Mouvex’s eccentric disc technology can pump air when no fluid is present creating a vacuum effect on the pump’s suction side and a compressor effect on the discharge side. So once the product has been discharged, air is pumped to push out the product “plug” for recovery.

A Mouvex SLS pump reduced orange juice concentrate unloading time at a Coca-Cola factory by two hours with increased product recovery and energy savings 

For example, at a Coca-Cola HBC production plant in Hungary, unloading viscous orange juice concentrate from trucks was proving time and energy consuming while also causing problems with cavitation. A Mouvex SLS pump reduced unloading time by two hours with increased product recovery and energy savings.

Plant maintenance manager Zoltan Marincsak said: “We reduced waste from 300 kilos to 100 kilos – with six unloading’s per week, it’s more than one tonne and saves us thousands of euros.”

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