To drive additional energy savings at its Cedar Rapids plant and to support the company’s corporate goal of a 20% improvement in energy intensity over 10 years, General Mills is conducting a comprehensive heat recovery project that is expected to reduce energy usage at the plant by about 5%. In combination with other recent efforts, this will lead to a total energy intensity improvement of about 23% over the last four years at the plant.
General Mills' Cedar Rapids, Iowa, plant is its largest production facility, producing over 70 million cases of ready-to-eat food annually, including cereals, fruit snacks, and frosting. Built in 1968, the facility has a successful history of energy reduction, the product of General Mills’ five-step process that benchmarks, identifies, develops, executes, and then validates energy reduction projects.
Energy reduction efforts implemented within the last four years at the Cedar Rapids plant have already reduced the facility’s energy intensity by 18%. These efforts include:
General Mills’ heat recovery project revolves around three improvements: heating ingredient water using “free” waste heat in multiple stages; using flash steam to regenerate a desiccant wheel for packaging dehumidification; and installing coil run-around loops to reduce dehumidification costs. All together, the heat recovery projects are expected to save General Mills about half a million dollars a year in energy costs, resulting in a payback period of a little over three years.
The three heat recovery improvements work as follows:
General Mills is evaluating similar heat recovery projects at 14 other sites, which could lead to annual savings of about $2 million. The heat recovery project is also reducing water consumption by 2.2 million gallons per year and preventing the release of approximately 5,500 tons of CO2 emissions from the Cedar Rapids site annually.