sott.net





Featured Book:

Political Ponerology


SOTT Focus Listing

· SOTT Focus articles listed by author




Latest Topics on the Signs Forum
· New Naomi Wolf video; Alien ET's and Virgin Pregancies; Chavez vs Bush
[ MOY ]
· Yes Minister-the series
[ aragorn ]
· KARMA OR CONSENT?
[ MOY ]
· Another Hovering Airplane
[ Miss Isness ]
· The Dark Knight
[ rise ]
· I'm New....
[ alex45 ]
· China's interest in the African continent
[ domivr ]
· ANOTHER crane collapse!
[ Danny ]

Firefox 3
This site best viewed
with Mozilla Firefox

SuperSearch Help

 


Business Weekly UK
Fri, 16 May 2008 09:32 EDT

Science & Technology

A Suffolk company has invested in ground-breaking Dutch technology that controls pests and bugs in food without the need for chemicals.

Weevil
©Business Weekly UK
Up close and personal with the pesky weevil

Food warehousing and distribution specialist, Anchor Storage near Debenham is helping to pioneer a new eco-friendly pest control chamber that eradicates bugs by stimulating and then cutting the oxygen supply.

According to Anchor Storage, there are an eye-watering 150 different species of insect that are commonly found in foodstuffs after it has been harvested. The culprits range from Flour beetles to moths to mice to, most common of all, Rice Weevil.

These bacteria-filled bugs are traditionally removed using a chemical fumigation process but Dutch company, EcO2 B.V. has developed an organic, non-toxic method of pest and insect control - totally safe for humans, not at all for bugs.

The system works by sealing the foodstuffs in an air-tight room then gradually raising the temperature to stimulate the pest's life cycle. Once a set temperature is reached and the bugs have respired and are fully active, the atmosphere is modified by reducing the oxygen level.

This, according to the companies, effectively kills all infestation whilst leaving the foodstuff unaffected. Anchor Storage is one of only six facilities in Britain to have invested in the ground-breaking technology.

Stephen Britt, managing director of Anchor Storage said: "We store a lot of organically-certified dried fruit, nuts, seeds, pulses and rice products. Pest-control has always been a problem in such foodstuffs but now we are able to guarantee our customers, and consumers, a wholly effective, quick, clean and organic solution to pest control.

"The technology is very exciting indeed, and can actually be applied to any product that can physically fit within the 250-m3 (cubic metre) chambers. We can bug-bust mattresses, duvets, basket-ware, clothing, furniture and so on. The potential is endless."

Richard Lawrey, technical director of the UK's largest independent Organics importer Community Foods Ltd, is one of the first to have tested Anchor Storage's Eco2 chambers since they were installed last month. He said: "We have put searched high and low for a suitable alternative to chemical fumigation for both our organic and non-organic produce. Eco2 offers us a better mix of effective treatment, reasonable processing times and improved energy efficiency than any other treatment method available."

Discuss on SOTT Forum


Reader Comments
 
(Register to add your comments!)
 

 

Donate to Signs

Donate once - or every month! Click here to learn how you can help!

Have a question or comment about the Signs page? Discuss it on the Signs of the Times news forum with the Signs Team.

Emails sent to Signs of the Times, Ark, Laura, or Cassiopaea become the property of Quantum Future Group, Inc and may be republished without notice.

Some icons appearing on this site were taken from KDE-look.org, Afterglow, Mayosoft, Everaldo, IconDrawer, VisualPharm, IconFactory, Klukeart, Icons-land, and TpdkDesign.net
.

Remember, we need your help to collect information on what is going on in your part of the world!
Send your article suggestions to: SOTT e-mail address


Original content copyright 2008 by Signs of the Times. See: Fair Use Policy

88 people have viewed this page since Tue, 20 May 2008

ATOM Feed   RSS

[Valid Atom 1.0]   [Valid RSS 2.0]