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News highlights of interest to the animal feed industry. Brought to you by Linx Publishing, publishers of: FeedLink.com and the e-magazine Feed Technology Update.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Indonesian Government Allows PetroAlgae Protein as Animal Feed Ingredient

PetroAlgae Inc., a leading renewable energy company, has received official notice that the protein from PetroAlgae's proprietary micro-crop production technology has successfully passed testing by the Indonesian Ministry of Agriculture, and that the PetroAlgae protein is suitable for use as a raw material in animal feed in Indonesia.

Furthermore, the protein has been cleared for importation as a raw material to be used as an ingredient for animal feed. This protein is a co-product of PetroAlgae's core bio-crude (renewable fuel feedstock) production system. Licensees of the PetroAlgae production system will be expected to follow the Guidance and Procedures for the Registration of Animal Feed in Indonesia.

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

5th Annual Conference/ Workshop “NSPRI 2010” Mycotoxin Management in Agriculture - Nigeria

Nigeria Mycotoxin Awareness and Study Network (NMASN) - 1st announcement and call for papers

April 26 - 28, 2010 at Nigeria Stored Products Research Institute, Ilorin, Nigeria

The Nigeria Mycotoxin Awareness and Study Network (NMASN) is a body of scientists in the academia, industry, government regulatory agencies, farmers and other stakeholders in the food and feed sectors united by the need to create awareness on mycotoxins. A Non-Governmental, Non-Political and Non-Profit-making scientific organization founded in 2006 by a group of Scientists, NMASN seeks to improve the living conditions of humanity, through increased support and promotion of studies on mycotoxins.

The network currently operates from National Agency for Foods Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) office in Lagos, Nigeria with members across the country in tertiary and research institutions, pharmaceutical companies, regulatory agencies, manufacturing and other related industries.

The network has organized and held four conferences since inauguration with support from regulatory agencies like SON and NAFDAC, food/feed industries and service providers like Biomin, Katchey, Neogen and Vicam. Other international bodies like the International Society for Mycotoxicology and MycoRed are expectedto collaborate in future initiatives directed at reducing mycotoxin contamination in agricultural products. The previous conferences have provided massive data on occurrence and significance of food-borne mycotoxins in Nigeria. NSPRI 2010 will therefore focus on strategies for mycotoxin management in agriculture andagricultural products. Papers reporting experiences and experiments in the area of control interventions will be given priority. Details of the 3rd NMASN workshop which will take place during NSPRI 2010 will be provided soon.

CALL FOR PAPERS: Abstracts of papers for oral presentations should be prepared as follows:Microsoft Word formatTimes New Roman font size 12Not more than 250 words3 to 5 keywordsAuthor(s) and affiliation(s) with corresponding author clearly indicatedAll abstracts should be submitted as email attachment to moedemao@yahoo.com copied to oystak@yahoo.co.uk.

Abstract submission deadline: February 26, 2010

CONFERENCE REGISTRATION FEELocal participants: N15, 000 onlyStudents with ID: N10, 000 onlyInternational participants: $100 only

ADVERTS & EXHIBITIONS RATESFull page – inside N80, 000Back cover page (inner or outer) N100, 000Exhibition rate: N50, 000

ACCOMMODATION: Hotel rates are from N2, 000 to as high as N15, 000 only depending on individual taste and preferences. Details will be provided in subsequent announcements.

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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

E.U. - Food and feed market crisis looms larger than ever as ministers avoid soy import problem again; Farmers, industry and trade warn of disruption of supplies

Industry and trade groups FEDIOL, FEFAC and COCERAL with the European farming association COPA-COGECA, increase their warnings over the severity of the problem of scarce soybean supplies in the EU after agriculture ministers meeting yesterday again failed to take responsibility for dealing effectively with the issue. Without a clear and effective response – urgently – the problem will get far worse.

The looming crisis in the EU food and livestock feed chain, with a total cost impact between E3.5bn and E5bn, remains. Since minute traces of US-approved genetically modified maize not yet authorized in the EU were discovered in consignments from the US in June 2009, breaching the EU’s policy of zero tolerance, around 180,000 tonnes of US soya have been denied entry to the EU. Whatever precautions are taken, it is not possible to guarantee the absence of minute levels of foreign materials, other than by ceasing the trade altogether, a problem the EU’s own Joint Research Centre has also recently identified in its report on the GM pipeline.

With the current lack of alternatives, and still no immediate action from the European Commission to propose a technical solution in the form of a so-called “low-level presence (LLP) threshold” for food and feed, this situation will leave Europe’s farmers, livestock producers and agricultural trade, as well as food and feed processing industries, in an extremely precarious position, keeping the global competitiveness of the EU agricultural sector at risk. The threat of lay-offs in the trade and processing industries, of already vulnerable livestock farmers going out of business, and of consumers being hit through knock-on effects on choice, availability and price all still remain.

Yesterday’s Farm Council was a missed opportunity to speed up the GM authorization process and provide an urgent solution to the looming crisis. Yet Member States have again left the decisions on individual product approvals to the Commission, which, though entering a period of political uncertainty with less than two weeks of its mandate remaining, should now follow up rapidly on the different GM events at stake. As regards LLP, the ball is once again firmly in the court of Commissioner Vassiliou, who must do what she has consistently resisted doing – come forward urgently with a proposed technical solution on zero tolerance for food and feed. Without it the situation could prove explosive for the whole food and feed chain.


FEDIOL represents the interests of the European seed and bean crushers, meals producers, vegetable oils and fats producers/processors. Its members crush 30 million tonnes of oilseeds a year, and the EU industry serves the second largest world market of vegetable oils after China.

FEFAC is the European Feed Manufacturers' Federation. The European compound feed industry employs over 110,000 persons on around 4,500 production sites often in rural areas, which offer few employment opportunities. Farm animals in the EU-27 consume an estimated 470 million tonnes of feed a year, of which 150 million tonnes are produced by the compound feed manufacturers. Turnover of the European compound feed industry is estimated at 40 billion €.

COCERAL is the voice of the European cereals, rice, feedstuffs, oilseeds, olive oil, oils and fats and agrosupply trade. Its members are the national trade organisations of most of the EU-27 Member States, who represent collectors, distributors, exporters, importers and agribulk storers of the above mentioned commodities

COPA-COGECA is the united voice of farmers and their cooperatives in the EU. Overall membership of both organisations has risen to 76. COPA represents 15 million people working either full or part- time on EU farm holdings whilst COGECA represents the interests of 40,000 farmers’ cooperatives employing some 660,000 people and with a global annual turnover in excess of 300 billion euros throughout the enlarged EU. COPA-COGECA aim to ensure that EU agriculture is sustainable, innovative, strong and competitive, guaranteeing food security to half a billion people throughout Europe.

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