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
Shawn Haney, Host of RealAg Radio on Rural Radio SiriusXM Channel 147, joined us on Tuesday’s Market Day Report with the latest news from Canada impacting the ag sector.
Dr. Deb Vnoverbeke, UNL’s Head of Animal Science, joins us with more about the university’s experiential learning programs designed to prepare veterinary students for the future of agriculture.
New SDRP funding and expanded loss programs give producers additional tools to rebuild cash flow and stabilize operations after two years of severe weather losses.
The new WOTUS proposal narrows federal jurisdiction, restores key agricultural exclusions, and gives farmers clearer permitting rules after years of regulatory uncertainty.
Here is a regional snapshot of harvest pace, crop conditions, logistics, and livestock economics across U.S. agriculture for the week of Monday, November 17, 2025.
UMN Extension’s Emily Krekelberg outlines today’s top farm stressors, key signs of mental health distress in rural communities, and the resources available for support.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Farmland values remain stable, but weakened credit conditions and lower expected farm income signal tighter financial margins heading into 2026.
The White House is now preparing to restore an Endangered Species Act (ESA) rule from the first Trump Administration.
Jerry Cosgrove with American Farmland Trust explains why farmers and ranchers should start their estate planning now.
Elizabeth Strom of the American Society of Farm Managers & Rural Appraisers joined RFD-TV to provide the latest perspective on post-harvest business planning and cropland markets in the Midwest.