Ethanol plants are taking training courses to comply with federal food safety rules

Ethanol plants around the country are taking steps to stay compliant with federal food safety rules, especially when it comes to what is being fed to livestock.

Under the Food Safety Modernization Act, or FSMA, ethanol facilities that produce distiller’s grains must follow strict preventative controls. The Renewable Fuels Association says these co-products feed livestock worldwide, so it is crucial to document the chain of custody from the corn entering the plant to the feed that goes out the door.

“Most important aspect of this is that the FDA has implemented the Food Safety Modernization Act, and as part of that program, you know your distiller grains, your co-products, anything that you’re using that’s going out the door there, there’s kind of the chain of chain of custody, right? So if you’re producing, you know, a distiller grain that gets fed to a cow and then that cow gets fed to humans, you know, you want to be able to document kind of the whole chain from the part, which we take the corn into the facility, the part where we produce the grain and then and where it gets fed,” said Justin Schultz, RFA’s Director of Environment, Health & Safety.

Schultz will lead a two-and-a-half-day training course next month in South Dakota. He describes the hazard analysis, preventative controls and verification requirements are tailored to the ethanol industry.

“There are 20 hours of standard training. This training is developed by the Food Safety Preventive Controls Alliance, so that the FSPCA, curriculum, is recognized by the FDA, and it meets all those requirements for the preventive controls qualified individual.”

The course is open to both members and nonmembers of the Renewable Fuels Association. With demand for training growing and regulations evolving, Schultz says now is the time for producers to get ahead and stay compliant.

Related Stories
Dr. Todd Davis, Chief Economist with the Indiana Farm Bureau, shares a snapshot of his state’s harvest conditions and insights from producers.
Market analyst Kevin Huddleston said news of trade deals could rebound cotton prices in late fall, and producers need to be ready to strike deals.
Texas A&M 4-H Director Montza Williams joins for an update on the expected timeline for the program’s new facility and all the associated benefits.
Shaun Haney, host of RealAg Radio, joined us to break down the latest data on Canadian farmland values and share insights on how it impacts producers.
Key signs of the U.S. beef herd’s recovery are improved pasture conditions, lower feed costs, and increased regulatory alignment and support for producers to implement targeted grazing practices.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

“It does not extinguish right away here — in any sort of sense — the real profitability concerns and people’s ability to pay bills and get to the other side of this in the very short term. This is where the skepticism builds.”
RFD-TV tax expert Roger McEowen discusses the renewed tax provision and how cattle producers can take advantage of it to recover investments in heifer retention and herd expansion more quickly.
U.S. Senator Roger Marshall (R-KS) shares his perspective on the U.S.-China trade developments and their potential impact on American producers, farmers, and ranchers.
Rich Nelson, a commodity broker for Allendale Inc., joins us to break down what the U.S.-China trade agreement means for the ag economy.
Rollins will also tour a small soybean operation in Iowa before her appearance at Lucas Oil Stadium.