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SUSTAINABILITY EXCELLENCE IN MANUFACTURING AWARDS
THIRD PLACE Project Category
Production Employee Idea Cuts Food Waste on Bob’s Red Mill Line by 70%
The Pacific Coast Food Waste Commitment (PCFWC) calls on food businesses and government entities to work collaboratively toward a goal of cutting food waste in half by 2030. Bob’s Red Mill was the first food manufacturer to join the voluntary agreement, setting to work to reduce food waste in its own operations.
With help from PCFWC and TripleWin Advisory, Bob’s Red Mill developed a multi-faceted employee engagement campaign to reduce food waste in the company’s whole grain milling and packaging facility in Milwaukie, Ore. Hosting a Food Waste Reduction Challenge, the manufacturer asked its employees for ideas on how to reduce food waste—from milling to packaging, to innovation, receiving, and quality.
“We started by asking, ‘Where is food wasted today that could be saved or prevented?’ We were impressed with the engagement from our employee owners, who submitted 176 creative, innovative food waste reduction ideas,” explains Julia Person, sustainability manager for Bob’s Red Mill. “We tested one reduction idea and implemented a change to a whole grain packaging line.”
The result: a more than 70% reduction in wasted food per pound of food packaged, on a single production line.
Following three months of the education campaign—incentivizing idea submissions, sharing a food waste educational video, and bolstering employee buy-in around reducing food waste— Bob’s Red Mill chose one employee suggestion to run as a five-week pilot.
The winning project idea, submitted by production employee Jennifer Blasko, focused on reducing grain spillover on a line producing granola products as well as pulse/whole grain products such as green lentils, split peas, and pearl couscous. It called for a method to better regulate grain flow, and implementation of the plan reduced food waste by more than 70%.
To conduct the pilot on the production line, a baseline was first measured. The maintenance team then made an adjustment to the line to reduce grain spillover from a conveyor belt by maintaining a metal screening tool that controls grain flow more regularly. The post-implementation measurement period ran for three weeks, to show the amount of food waste produced after the fix.