8 CapitalPress.com Friday, July 9, 2021 Dairy Subscribe to our weekly dairy or livestock email newsletter at CapitalPress.com/newsletters Darigold plans to build $450M facility in Washington By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press PASCO, Wash. — Darigold plans to build a $450 million dairy process- ing plant in Pasco, Wash. The plant will produce a new spe- cialized protein powder and but- ter at what the company and Port of Pasco offi cials are touting as “the most sophisticated large-scale milk protein facility in North America.” “It’s great news for ag and all of Washington State, keeping a process- ing plant of this size and scope,” Randy Hayden, executive director of the port, told the Capital Press. “(It) will sup- port not just the manufacturing jobs at the plant – all of the jobs at the farms and transportation industry. It’s great to have these facilities here supporting our farmers.” “It’s a deeper commitment from the state’s largest co-op to dairy in Wash- ington state,” said Dan Wood, execu- tive director of the state Dairy Feder- ation. “A couple hundred direct jobs, another thousand support jobs, which is major economic development. It just underscores how important dairy is to the state economy.” Port commissioners approved the sale of roughly 150 acres of the Rei- mann Industrial Center to Darigold during a special commission meeting July 1. Darigold intends to bring the new facility online in the fall of 2023, according to a port press release. Darigold expects to process up to 8 million pounds of milk per day in the new facility, said Tafl ine Laylin, leader of sustainability communications and social engagement for the company. The operation will produce specialized products that can’t be made in any of the company’s other plants. More than 50% of the facility’s fi n- ished product is intended for export, with an emphasis on the Pacifi c Rim. Darigold will deploy anaerobic digestion technology as part of the on-site wastewater treatment strat- egy and use the extracted methane as FC TC CENTER-PIVOT a natural gas substitute, reducing fossil fuel use, according to a company press release. This will be complemented by machinery that enables heat and energy recovery and reuse. In addition, the new infrastructure is designed to accommodate future electric vehicles, including a potential conversion of Dairgold’s large fl eet of semi-trucks — further reducing green- house gas emissions associated with transportation, the company says. Darigold has been working with the port since last fall as part of its exten- sive Pacifi c Northwest search for the right location for its new facility. Dari- gold offi cials predict the capital invest- ment will be between $450 million and $500 million. The new plant “is expected to accelerate our farmer-owned coopera- tive’s goal of reaching carbon neutral- ity by 2050, cementing a longstanding tradition of continuous stewardship and sustainability improvements,” said Stan Ryan, president and CEO of Darigold, in the press release. 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It was unclear how the ruling would aff ect Ecolo- gy’s timeline for updating the rules, which are due to expire in March 2022. Ecology already is work- ing on a new CAFO per- mit and may have a draft proposal soon. An Ecol- ogy spokeswoman said the department was reviewing the decision and considering its next step. Ecology issued the CAFO permit in 2017 after lengthy discussions with the dairy industry and envi- ronmental groups. The reg- ulations didn’t entirely sat- isfy either group, and both sides appealed aspects of the permit. The appeals were merged into one case. The court through Adjuvants containing Stor ™ Technology deliver faster and greater uptake of active ingredient to the target. Defend every acre with Found in Conform™ and Downrigger™, exclusively at The McGregor Company S252531-1 handed the coalition of envi- ronmental groups, led by the Puget Soundkeeper Alli- ance, a nearly total victory. The court did reject claims by the environmental groups that manure lagoons should have synthetic lin- ers and leak-detection sys- tems. The judges agreed with Ecology and the dairy industry that synthetic liners would be too expensive. The court, however, said the permits failed to set deadlines for repairing lagoons that were at risk of leaking nitrates into ground- water. High levels of nitrates are a health risk, especially for infants and unborn children. The court also said farm- ers should be required to monitor water quality. Ecol- ogy had argued that testing soils and other conditions in the permit were suffi - cient. Monitoring wells was impractical and didn’t pre- vent pollution, according to Ecology. The court also faulted Ecology for not considering the eff ects of climate change in writing the regulations. Washington State Dairy Federation director Dan Wood said dairies look for- ward to talking about the industry’s effi cient use of land and water. “Dairy farmers have a remarkable story to tell with regard to environmental improvements and address- ing climate change,” he said. The judges also said pol- lution-prevention plans writ- ten by individual dairies should be subjected to pub- lic comment. The court rejected the one appeal brought by the Dairy Federation and Wash- ington Farm Bureau. The farm groups argued that a formula devel- oped in the United King- dom for determining when crops were ready to take up manure nutrients in the spring would stunt crops in Eastern Washington. The court ruled that crop growth wasn’t the point and that there wasn’t any evi- dence the formula would not protect groundwater. The permit, wrote Judge Anne Cruser, “does not require promotion of the greatest crop yields.” The court didn’t take into account climate diff erences between Eastern and West- ern Washington, Wood said. “We’ll continue to work with Ecology to help them understand that there are two distinct climate areas in our state and that standards must be developed for each...,” Wood said. Judges Linda Lee and Lisa Sutton concurred in the opinion. Washington has approx- imately 300 dairies. Dair- ies and other CAFOs are not required to obtain per- mits, but the permits provide some protection from fi nes and lawsuits. Any operation that confi nes livestock to an enclosed area for 45 days in a year meets the defi nition of a CAFO. The other environmen- tal groups involved in the appeal are the Sierra Club, Waterkeeper Alliance, Cen- ter for Food Safety, Friends of Toppenish Creek and Community Association for the Restoration of the Environment.