South Idaho Chobani Plant to Reduce Water Use

Greek yogurt maker Chobani says a newly installed reverse-osmosis filtration system at its south-central Idaho plant will reduce the company’s consumption of water by 20 percent.

548b70cb36783.preview-620
548b70cb36783.preview-620
(DREW NASH, TIMES-NEWS PHOTOS)

Greek yogurt maker Chobani says a newly installed reverse-osmosis filtration system at its south-central Idaho plant will reduce the company’s consumption of water by 20 percent.

The Times-News reports that the company is installing the new machine to help reduce complaints from its residential neighbors.

Last year, Hollister residents complained about increased truck traffic and odors coming from a local farm that recycled the company’s acid whey, which is a waste product of the yogurt plant.

A Chobani official says the new system will pull pure water from the whey and be reused inside the plant to sanitize tanks. The new system is expected to save the company 170,000 gallons of water per day.

The Packer logo (567x120)
Related Stories
Months after canneries in Modesto and Hughson shut down, clingstone peach growers face canceled contracts and an uncertain supply chain.
The Washington Red Raspberry Commission says a byproduct of Mexico’s fight against spotted wing drosophila is flooding the U.S. puree market with low-cost fruit that domestic processors can’t match.
Jeff Goodale, senior vice president of strategy and business development at Duda Farm Fresh Foods, says this new fresh-cut line reflects growing consumer demand for ready-to-use produce.
Read Next
The Securing Agriculture’s Workforce Act aims to redefine temporary labor, providing a potential lifeline to specialty crop sectors teetering on a workforce tipping point.
Get Daily News
GET MARKET ALERTS
Get News & Markets App