Northern Crops Institute is scheduled to host an open house on Wednesday, Aug. 20, to celebrate the completion of a major equipment upgrade at the institute’s Feed Production Center. The upgrade includes the installation of a new mixer, a new automation system, and the facility’s first micro-ingredient system. More than 75 percent of the $800,000 project costs came from commodity groups and private industry donations, according to Mark Weber, director of the Northern Crops Institute.
Funding for the upgrade was a collaborative effort between the North Dakota legislature, the feed equipment industry and regional commodity groups. It began with seed money from North Dakota’s 63rd Legislative Session in 2013, and grew with monetary donations from the North Dakota corn and soybean commodity groups, and generous equipment donations from the feed industry’s equipment manufacturers. NDSU also provided valuable facility management services.
Northern Crops Institute feed center upgrade donors include:
- APEC-Automated Process Equipment Corp.
- Bliss Industries Inc.
- Border States Electric
- Endress+Hauser
- Industrial Fabrication Services Inc.
- Interstates Control Systems Inc.
- Intersystems Inc.
- Seedburo Equipment Co.
- Scott Equipment Co.
- The Essmueller Co.
- Viking Pump Inc.
- North Dakota Corn Council
- North Dakota Soybean Council
- North Dakota 63rd Legislative Assembly 2013
“We are very excited for the public to come and see the new feed center equipment and learn about our new and expanded technical capabilities,” Weber said. “At the open house, we will recognize our industry donors and commodity partners for their significant support in this major equipment renovation.”
Guests can tour the Northern Crops Institute’s main facility at 1240 Bolley Drive on the NDSU campus from 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. The festivities will then move to the Feed Production Center at 3212 19th Ave. N., where project donors will be publicly recognized. Feed center tours and refreshments also will be available. The event is open to the public.
Meanwhile, 18 Chinese feed manufacturers will be at the Feed Production Center the week of Aug. 18-22 to attend the Feed Manufacturing Technology course. They will be the first group to do hands-on training with the new equipment. The course is sponsored by the Minnesota Soybean Research and Promotion Council, North Dakota Soybean Council and the South Dakota Soybean Council.
The Feed Production Center hosts feed training courses for participants from around the world and serves as a training facility for regional undergraduate and graduate students. In addition, the center is a working feed mill, producing livestock feed for the university’s animal units as well as research projects.
“This renovation was necessary to aid the education capabilities of NCI.The two primary goals of the feed center are to teach feed manufacturers and to make feed for the NDSU animals,” says Kim Koch, Feed Production Center manager. “Our previous system made good feed, but it was not the kind of system on which you want to train people for the modern feed industry. Because NCI is a globally-recognized leader in training and education, our visitors expect to see the most modern equipment. It’s a competitive world and we need to be at the highest level of technology.”
Northern Crops Institute supports regional agriculture and value-added processing by conducting educational and technical programs that expand and maintain domestic and international markets for northern-grown crops. The institute is funded by the states of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota and commodity groups in those states and Montana.