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Media Room -
News Release
CONTACT:
Nick Weber
Public Relations Manager
314-659-3379
nweber@solae.com
Solae Helps Food Manufacturers Cope with
High Dairy Prices
ST. LOUIS (October 4, 2007)—With prices
for dairy ingredients doubling in the past year and no indication
of relief in sight, Solae’s portfolio of dairy protein alternatives
offers food manufacturers the opportunity to save money while still
producing high quality, healthy products.
“Rising dairy protein costs affect food manufacturers’
in two ways: it lowers their short-term profitability and inhibits
their ability to predict where their profitability might be down
the road,” said Will Black, Senior Director, Global Strategy
at Solae. “Solae’s soy proteins can relieve those economic
pressures and deliver similar nutritional and functional benefits.”
According to the Sept. 27 edition of Dairy Market News, prices
for nonfat dry milk and whole milk powder have more than doubled
since September 2006, and casein prices are 75 percent higher.
In the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s July 2007 report,
“Dairy: World Market and Trade,” it states several factors
have contributed to the current situation, including strong international
demand for dairy ingredients, higher production costs and supply
shortfalls in key milk-producing regions like Australia and Western
Europe. The report concluded the fundamental factors that promoted
escalation of dairy prices during this past year will continue to
persist into 2008.
Soy protein is a high-quality protein, and there is no compromise
in protein quality when substituting soy for dairy proteins. Depending
on the application, formulators often can replace 20 to 100 percent
of the dairy protein with soy protein. Economically, soy protein
provides direct cost savings in the range of 20 to 60 percent versus
commonly used dairy proteins based on today’s pricing and
offers stable pricing and supply availability advantages as well.
Recent advances in technology make the task of replacing dairy
with soy protein even more achievable today. Many of Solae’s
proteins provide calcium-to-protein ratios equivalent to dairy proteins
and target similar macronutrient compositions, providing ease of
formulation advantages. Solae’s application research has also
discovered process and formulation approaches that can also ensure
success with its solutions.
“We have worked closely with our customers for many years,
helping them save formula costs by replacing dairy proteins with
our soy proteins,” Black said. “However, what is different
today is that we have a broader portfolio of potential solutions
– both product and formulation approaches – that we
can tap into.”
Solae offers soy protein-based alternatives to dairy proteins that
are functional in many applications.
“Nutritional beverages, nutrition bars and bakery products
are some of the more obvious applications, where we have proven
solutions and a wealth of experience and expertise,” Black
noted. “However, dairy proteins are used as functional ingredients
in a lot of other applications, including sauces, gravies, puddings,
frozen desserts and more. All of these are viable cost-savings targets
for our solutions.”
For more information on Solae’s products, contact Shellie
Kramer at 314-659-3193.
About Solae
Solae is the world leader in developing innovative soy-based technology
to the food, meat and nutritional products industries. Solae provides
solutions that deliver a unique combination of functional, nutritional
and economic benefits to our customers. Headquartered in St. Louis,
Missouri, USA, with annual revenue exceeding $1 billion, the company
was formed through an alliance between Bunge Limited (NYSE: BG)
and DuPont (NYSE: DD). For more information, visit www.solae.com.
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