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March 15, 2013

15/03/13: Taraori Rice Mills changes hands; Alltech joins IPC; Inorganic phosphorus in animal feeds

Ebro Foods is to buy Taraori Rice Mills Private Ltd., the holding company for Olam International Ltd.’s rice milling assets in India. The $14.5 million transaction includes a rice milling facility in Haryana, India, that has the capacity to process 18 tonnes of paddy rice per hour, reports Baking Business.

Alltech has joined the International Poultry Council (IPC), the global organisation which discusses trade, science, and improve relations among nations in the poultry industry.
“Alltech is honored to join the International Poultry Council. This group is made up of companies, government groups, and leaders throughout the poultry industry trying to find consensus on important issues related to trade, disease, and standards at a global level. By operating in 128 countries, Alltech can help provide local understanding as well as a global view to this discussion,” said Dr Mark Pearse Lyons, Alltech vice president, corporate affairs.

Inorganic phosphorus is often the second most expensive nutrient in a diet, and consequently there is pressure to minimise dietary phosphorus safety margins. Most producers use a phytase enzyme and rely on the manufacturer’s recommended matrix value to determine how much added phosphorous can be removed from the diet. AB Vista stresses the need for feed producers to be aware of the safety margins placed on phytase matrices to ensure animal performance and profitability is not compromised and to make true efficacy comparisons between the different phytase products.
With many phytase matrices derived from amalgamations of growth performance and/or digestibility trials, there is growing concern among nutritionists that the matrix values applied to a given phytase do not accurately represent the results seen in the field.  Given that the inorganic P is the second most expensive nutrient in the diet, even small adjustments to the P matrix can result in significant cost savings when using a phytase.
Field results with Quantum Blue consistently show that the matrix is achieved in the vast majority of cases where it is employed.  As market economics continue to put pressure on P levels in diets, the robustness of claimed phytase matrices will be tested more than ever before, and as a result such conservative approaches to matrix derivation become more and more warranted.
Mike Bedford, Research Director, AB Vista; “With rising costs, decisions made on the P matrix of the phytase and the P requirements of the animal are now under intense scrutiny.  As a result, safety margins in dietary P are under pressure, challenging the matrices of all phytases to a greater extent. Factors such as mineral levels in the diet and intrinsic animal metabolism will affect enzyme activity and consequently P release.  At AB Vista we strongly recommend feed producers consider how the matrices are derived, taking into account the safety margins applied, in order to evaluate product efficacy.”
Not all phytases matrices are derived in the same way and some use a 50 percent confidence limit.  Quantum Blue matrix for available phosphorus is calculated based on a 90 percent confidence value, assuring customers that in 90 percent of the time Quantum Blue is included in the feed, it will release a P level equivalent to or higher than the recommended value.

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