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Oct. 31, 2000

Researchers Identify Environmentally Safe Hog Waste Disposal Methods

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The hog industry is an important economic engine in North Carolina and several other states -- but one that has generated concern about the impact of livestock waste disposal on water, soil and air quality.

Researchers at North Carolina State University are taking the lead role in developing new technologies that will enable hog farms to protect environmental quality while providing jobs and agricultural income for North Carolina and other hog-producing states.

This summer, NC State received a $15 million grant to coordinate the development and identification of environmentally friendly technologies for the treatment of hog waste. The funding, from Smithfield Foods, Inc., was the result of a landmark agreement between Smithfield Foods and N.C. Attorney General Mike Easley to phase out open-air hog lagoons and sprayfields in North Carolina over five years. Smithfield is the largest pork producer in the United States.

NC State received a second, $2.5 million grant from a similar agreement signed in October between Easley and Premium Standard Farms, the nation's second-largest pork producer.

Research has focused on five promising technologies that may be up and running on hog farms in less than five years, said Dr. Mike Williams, director of NC State's Animal and Poultry Waste Management Center, which is leading the research effort.

"Animal waste treatment is not an issue only in North Carolina," Williams says. "We feel that some of these technologies may have national as well as worldwide applications."

Currently, most swine waste is treated as a liquid in earthen containment structures called lagoons, in which bacteria break down the waste aerobically. The treated effluent from the lagoons is then sprayed onto field crops that use the nutrients contained in the effluent. The N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources estimates that the state’s 2,400 hog farms use 4,000 active lagoons.

Treatment of livestock waste is a controversial subject in North Carolina and several other states. Waste from large hog and poultry farms has been blamed for polluting surface waters, contaminating wells, creating noxious odors, and discharging ammonia into the air. Treatment and disposal of the waste costs farmers tens of millions of dollars each year.

Research indicates that the lagoon and sprayfield approach to treating hog waste is reliable, when properly designed, sited, constructed and managed, Williams says. But, he adds, evidence suggests that there's reason to study the impact of that approach on water, air and soil quality.

Easley negotiated the Smithfield and Premium Standard agreements following the torrential rains and flooding of Hurricane Floyd, which caused many North Carolina hog waste lagoons to overflow. Smithfield, with its subsidiaries, is the largest hog producing and hog processing company in the world. Smithfield's farms represent 70 percent of North Carolina's hog industry.

The NC State Animal and Poultry Waste Management Center is leading the two-year process of evaluating and developing new technologies for treating waste and determining the feasibility of those technologies for the North Carolina hog industry. Once a technology is developed and identified by the university as technically and environmentally sound, Smithfield and its subsidiaries will be required to implement it within three years.

Five technologies are in the advanced stages of development and testing, while others are in the works. Those nearly ready for implementation, following pilot projects at commercial and research farms throughout eastern North Carolina, are:

In addition to addressing environmental concerns, Williams says, all five of the technologies significantly reduce odors usually associated with hog waste treatment systems.

The Animal and Poultry Waste Management Center was established at NC State in 1994 to promote new and better ways to reduce the cost and environmental impact of animal-waste management. The center supports research by scientists at NC State and other institutions to develop new waste technologies. It also supports efforts by scientists and economists to evaluate the effectiveness of technologies already commercially available. Test results are made public through the center's Technology Evaluation and Demonstration Program.

In addition to funding the waste technology research, Smithfield and Premium Standard have agreed to identify their farms located in floodplains and ensure that they are moved or altered so that they are not at risk of flooding; to identify at-risk farms and correct those risks; to identify wetlands and implement plans for their protection; to identify and close abandoned lagoons; and to adopt accredited environmental management systems. The companies also have agreed to play a leadership role in the comprehensive improvement of water quality in eastern North Carolina.

-- potter --

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