Industries

Food & Beverage Manufacturing

Nearly every step in food and beverage production - cooking, pasteurizing, sterilizing, drying, evaporating, distilling, rendering, extracting, and cleaning - runs on steam, direct-fired heat, or both.

Nearly every step in food and beverage production - cooking, pasteurizing, sterilizing, drying, evaporating, distilling, rendering, extracting, and cleaning - runs on steam, direct-fired heat, or both. CPE engineers the boiler houses, steam distribution systems, direct-fired dryer and oven burner systems, waste heat recovery, dust collection, and emissions controls that keep these plants running, efficient, and in compliance.

Food plants present a specific engineering context. Production schedules are driven by perishable raw materials and customer delivery windows, not by equipment convenience. Sanitation requirements dictate shutdown frequency and duration. Steam quality matters at the point of use - not just at the boiler - because contaminated steam in direct-contact applications means contaminated product. And many food plants have grown organically over decades, with boiler houses, steam piping, and condensate systems that reflect 30 years of additions, modifications, and workarounds rather than any cohesive engineering design. CPE works within all of these realities.

Sugar Milling & Refining

Sugar mills are among the most thermally self-sufficient industrial operations in existence - they grow their own fuel. Bagasse, the fibrous residue remaining after sugarcane is crushed and juice is extracted, provides the thermal energy to power the entire milling operation when the combustion and steam systems are properly designed and operated. A well-engineered sugar mill exports electricity to the grid during grinding season while meeting all internal process steam demands.

Bagasse-Fired Boilers. Bagasse is a challenging fuel - high moisture (typically 48-52% as-fired), low density, high volatile content, and variable fiber length. CPE provides boiler design and specification for bagasse service, including grate system design, combustion air system design tailored to bagasse characteristics, bagasse feed and distribution systems, steam drum internals for high-purity steam generation, and furnace sizing for adequate residence time and complete combustion of entrained fines.

Cogeneration. Modern sugar mills are cogeneration facilities. High-pressure steam (typically 600-900 psig in new installations) drives extraction-condensing or backpressure turbine generators, with extraction steam at intermediate pressures supplying the process. CPE develops mill energy balances that model the interaction between boiler capacity, turbine performance, process steam demand, and exportable electricity across the full range of operating conditions - from peak grinding throughput to off-crop maintenance periods.

Mill Steam Systems. A sugar mill’s process steam system is extensive - juice heaters, multiple-effect evaporator trains, vacuum pans, centrifugal drives, and various heating and cleaning loads. Each evaporator effect produces vapor at a lower pressure that serves as the heating medium for the next, creating a cascading heat recovery system that is extraordinarily efficient when properly designed and maintained - and extraordinarily wasteful when it drifts out of balance. CPE provides evaporator train performance assessment, vapor bleeding strategy analysis, condensate management, and debottlenecking studies.

Lime Kilns. Sugar refineries operate rotary lime kilns to regenerate calcium oxide for juice clarification - direct-fired rotary kilns burning natural gas or fuel oil at 1800-2200°F. CPE provides kiln burner design and optimization, refractory evaluation, shell temperature surveys, and combustion efficiency assessment.

Emissions. Bagasse-fired boiler emissions are primarily particulate matter, CO from incomplete combustion, and NOx. CPE designs multiclone collectors, ESPs, wet scrubbers, and baghouse systems for bagasse boiler particulate control, addressing the specific challenges of bagasse ash - abrasive, high in silica, and erosive to collector internals and convection surfaces.

Edible Oils & Oilseed Processing

Oilseed processing - soybean, canola, sunflower, cottonseed, corn germ, palm kernel, and specialty oils - is a large-scale thermal process industry where steam is required at every stage of extraction, refining, and finishing. A large soybean crushing plant may process 4,000-6,000 tons of beans per day and consume 150,000-300,000 lb/hr of steam.

Solvent Extraction. The dominant extraction method uses hexane as a solvent. The downstream desolventizing-toasting (DT) operation that strips hexane from the extracted meal is intensely steam-dependent, using both direct and indirect steam injection at multiple stages. CPE provides DT steam supply design, including the integration of direct steam injection with indirect heating through steam-jacketed vessels and coils.

Flash Steam Recovery. Condensate from high-pressure users flashes when pressure is reduced, and this flash steam contains significant recoverable energy that many plants simply vent to atmosphere. CPE identifies, sizes, and designs flash steam recovery systems that can reduce boiler fuel consumption by 5-15% in plants that have not previously addressed this waste stream.

Deodorizers. Edible oil deodorizers operate at high temperatures (450-520°F) under vacuum, using steam stripping to remove free fatty acids and volatiles. CPE provides heat integration analysis for deodorizer systems, evaluating whether waste heat from deodorizer discharge can be recovered to preheat incoming oil or generate lower-pressure steam for other process uses.

Dryer Systems. Seed preparation and meal processing involve direct-fired or steam-heated rotary and flash dryers. CPE provides dryer burner system design, combustion optimization, energy assessment, and emissions control - cyclone systems, scrubbers, and thermal oxidizers for particulate, VOCs, and odor.

Boiler House & Steam Systems. Oilseed processing plants typically operate natural gas-fired package boilers with multiple units for redundancy. Some facilities co-fire biomass (hulls, shells, or other seed processing residuals) for fuel cost reduction. CPE provides boiler selection and specification, performance assessment, efficiency optimization, multi-boiler load management, fuel conversion feasibility, condensate segregation programs, and system-wide energy audits.

Hexane Safety. Boiler and burner installations in or near extraction buildings must comply with NFPA 36 (Solvent Extraction Plants) and relevant electrical classification requirements. CPE ensures that fired equipment design, fuel train specification, and ignition system selection are appropriate for the hazard classification.

Meat, Poultry & Rendering

Protein processing is one of the heaviest steam-consuming sectors in food manufacturing. A large beef slaughter and fabrication plant may use 80,000-150,000 lb/hr of steam, and an attached rendering operation can double that demand. The combination of high thermal loads, aggressive odor and emissions challenges, and stringent sanitation requirements makes this sub-sector a natural fit for CPE’s integrated approach to boiler house and emissions engineering.

Boiler House. Meat and poultry plants operate boiler houses sized for the combined demands of slaughter, processing, rendering, and sanitation. A boiler trip during production can shut down an entire kill floor within minutes when steam pressure drops. CPE provides boiler selection and specification, multi-boiler load management, performance assessment, and fuel conversion studies - including evaluation of biomass firing using dried rendered product or waste material as fuel.

Rendering. Rendering is the thermal processing of animal byproducts into usable products - tallow, meat and bone meal, blood meal, feather meal. CPE provides steam supply system design for rendering operations, with particular attention to the high peak-to-average load ratio from batch cooker charges and the condensate management challenges posed by contaminated rendering condensate.

Thermal Oxidizers & Odor Control. Rendering operations generate intense odors - a complex mixture of reduced sulfur compounds, amines, aldehydes, and organic acids - that require thermal destruction. CPE designs direct-fired thermal oxidizers, regenerative thermal oxidizers (RTOs), and catalytic oxidizers for rendering exhaust, including non-condensable gas (NCG) streams from cookers and dryers. The firm addresses destruction efficiency, auxiliary fuel consumption, heat recovery from oxidizer exhaust, and backup/bypass provisions for oxidizer maintenance without shutting down the rendering operation.

Blood & Feather Meal Drying. Ring dryers, rotary dryers, and disc dryers used for blood meal and feather meal production are direct-fired or steam-heated systems with challenging emissions. CPE provides dryer burner system design, dryer exhaust emissions control, and energy optimization for these systems.

Scalding, Cooking & Sanitation Steam. Beyond rendering, the slaughter and processing side uses steam for carcass scalding, cooking, retort processing, and hot water generation for CIP and sanitation programs. CPE ensures that the steam distribution system delivers adequate pressure, temperature, and quality at each point of use, with particular attention to direct-contact steam applications where steam quality directly affects food safety.

Wastewater Thermal Systems. CPE addresses the thermal systems that support wastewater treatment - boiler or waste heat supply for DAF systems, anaerobic digester heating, and biogas utilization. For plants generating biogas from anaerobic digestion, CPE evaluates the feasibility and design of biogas co-firing in existing boilers or dedicated biogas burner systems.

Dairy Processing

Dairy manufacturing spans a wide range of thermal intensity - from fluid milk plants with moderate steam loads to spray-drying operations that rival small power plants in energy consumption. CPE’s scope in dairy centers on the boiler house, dryer burner systems, dust collection, and the steam distribution that connects generation to the diverse thermal end uses in these facilities.

Spray Dryer Systems. Spray drying - converting liquid milk, whey, or permeate into powder - is the defining thermal operation in dairy manufacturing. A large spray dryer installation may fire 50-150 MMBtu/hr through direct-fired air heaters. CPE provides spray dryer burner system design, combustion tuning, and inlet air temperature control, where even small temperature variations affect product moisture, solubility, scorched particle count, and other quality parameters that directly determine product value.

Dust Collection & Explosion Protection. Dairy powder operations require sophisticated dust collection for both product recovery and combustible dust hazard management per NFPA 652 and NFPA 61. Dairy powders - particularly whey permeate, lactose, and non-fat dry milk - have well-documented combustible dust properties. CPE provides dust collection system design and evaluation, explosion protection (venting, suppression, and isolation), and compliance support for NFPA combustible dust standards.

Evaporators & Pasteurizers. Upstream of the dryer, multiple-effect evaporators and mechanical vapor recompression (MVR) systems concentrate liquid product to reduce spray drying energy demand. CPE provides steam supply design for evaporator systems, evaluates evaporator-to-dryer energy integration, and addresses the steam and condensate systems serving pasteurizers (HTST, UHT, and ESL systems) throughout the plant.

Boiler House. Dairy plants operate natural gas-fired boilers, often with multiple units for redundancy in facilities where a steam interruption shuts down pasteurization and triggers regulatory hold on all product in process. CPE provides boiler selection and specification, performance assessment, efficiency optimization, and multi-boiler sequencing strategy. For larger dairy operations, CPE evaluates cogeneration feasibility using backpressure turbines between high-pressure boiler output and lower-pressure process demand.

CIP & Sanitation Steam. Dairy plants run extensive clean-in-place programs multiple times per day on pasteurizers, evaporators, dryers, and filling lines. CIP demand creates significant cyclic loading on the boiler house, often coinciding with production run transitions. CPE designs steam systems that accommodate these cyclic loads without pressure excursions that affect concurrent production.

Refrigeration Waste Heat. Dairy plants operate large ammonia or CO₂ refrigeration systems. The heat rejected by refrigeration condensers represents a waste heat stream that can be recovered for boiler feedwater preheating, CIP hot water generation, or facility heating. CPE evaluates and designs these heat recovery systems as part of plant-wide energy optimization.

Grain, Rice & Milling

Grain processing - wheat flour milling, corn milling, rice milling, oat processing, barley malting, and animal feed manufacturing - shares a common engineering profile: direct-fired dryer and roaster burner systems, significant combustible dust hazard management requirements, and steam systems for conditioning, heating, and process use.

Grain & Seed Dryers. Column dryers, rack dryers, and continuous-flow dryers for grain, rice, corn, and oilseed drying are direct-fired systems operating at high air volumes and moderate temperatures. CPE provides dryer burner design and specification, combustion optimization for fuel efficiency and moisture uniformity, burner management system (BMS) design per NFPA 86, and dryer exhaust emissions assessment.

Rice Milling & Parboiling. Parboiled rice production uses steam soaking and high-temperature drying to gelatinize starch within the paddy before milling, improving milling yield and nutritional retention. CPE provides parboiling steam system design, dryer burner systems, and heat recovery from dryer exhaust.

Rice Hull Combustion. Rice mills generate hulls as a milling byproduct - approximately 20% of paddy weight. Rice hulls are a viable boiler fuel with consistent properties, and many rice mills operate hull-fired boilers or gasifiers to offset purchased fuel costs. CPE provides rice hull-fired boiler design, combustion system optimization (hulls present specific challenges due to low bulk density, high ash content, and clinker formation from silica-rich ash), and ash handling system design.

Flour & Grain Milling Dust Collection. Grain dust is among the most well-documented combustible dust hazards in industry. CPE provides dust collection system design and evaluation, combustible dust hazard analysis (DHA) per NFPA 652, explosion protection system design per NFPA 68 and NFPA 69, pneumatic conveying system evaluation, and compliance with NFPA 61. The firm integrates dust collection and explosion protection design with the facility’s overall ventilation, HVAC, and process exhaust systems.

Malting & Roasting. Malt houses and grain roasting operations use direct-fired kilns and roasters requiring precise temperature control and uniform air distribution. CPE provides kiln and roaster burner system design, combustion optimization, and exhaust emissions control, including thermal oxidizer systems for roaster smoke and VOC emissions.

Feed Mills. Animal feed manufacturing - pelleting, extrusion, and drying - uses steam for pellet conditioning, extruder processing, and product drying. CPE provides boiler house engineering, steam conditioning system design, pellet cooler and dryer burner systems, and dust collection for feed mill operations.

Brewing & Distilling

Large-scale brewing and distilling operations - beer, bourbon, grain spirits - operate sizable boiler plants and thermal process systems that are functionally identical to other heavy process industries in their engineering requirements.

Boiler House. Breweries and distilleries operate natural gas-fired boilers supplying steam for brew kettles, mash heating, wort boiling, distillation column reboilers, bottle and can pasteurizers, CIP systems, and building heat. A large brewery may operate 100,000+ lb/hr of boiler capacity; a major bourbon distillery may exceed that. CPE provides boiler selection and specification, performance assessment and efficiency optimization, multi-boiler load management, and steam system design.

Distillation. Distillation is the core thermal operation in spirits production. CPE provides distillation column reboiler steam supply design, heat integration between columns (beer column, rectifier, side stripper, fusel oil column), and waste heat recovery from condenser and stillage systems. For fuel ethanol operations, distillation energy consumption is the single largest operating cost driver, and even small improvements in heat integration or reboiler efficiency translate into meaningful economic impact.

Spent Grain & Co-Product Drying. Breweries and distilleries generate large volumes of spent grain that must be dried for sale as animal feed. CPE provides dryer burner system design, combustion optimization, dryer exhaust emissions control (particulate, VOC, and odor), and waste heat recovery from dryer exhaust. DDGS dryer systems in fuel ethanol plants are particularly significant - a large dry mill ethanol plant may fire 100+ MMBtu/hr across multiple dryer burner systems.

CO₂ Recovery. Fermentation produces CO₂ that can be captured, purified, and used for carbonation, packaging, or sale. The waste heat from CO₂ compressors represents a recovery opportunity for boiler feedwater or process water preheating. CPE evaluates these heat integration opportunities as part of brewery and distillery energy optimization.

Wastewater & Biogas. Breweries and distilleries generate high-BOD wastewater commonly treated in anaerobic digesters, producing biogas that can be used as boiler fuel. CPE evaluates biogas quality, quantity, and the combustion system modifications required to co-fire biogas in existing natural gas boilers - including fuel train design, burner modification, and emissions compliance implications.

General Food Manufacturing

Bakeries, snack food plants, frozen food operations, canned food processors, beverage and juice facilities, pet food manufacturers, confectioneries, and prepared food operations share common thermal system requirements that CPE addresses regardless of the specific product being manufactured.

Direct-Fired Ovens, Fryers & Roasters. Commercial baking ovens, snack food fryers, nut and coffee roasters, and tortilla ovens are direct-fired natural gas equipment with large aggregate fuel consumption. CPE provides burner system design and optimization - zone-by-zone temperature profiling, combustion tuning, fuel-air ratio control, and BMS compliance with NFPA 86. The firm also provides oven energy assessment, evaluating exhaust losses, conveyor losses, and heat recovery potential.

Retort & Cooking Systems. Canned food and retort pouch operations use batch or continuous retorts that consume large quantities of steam for product sterilization. Retort steam loads are highly cyclic, and CPE designs steam supply systems that maintain header pressure stability across batch cycles without oversizing the boiler plant.

Extrusion. Pet food, snack food, cereal, and aquaculture feed production use extruders that require steam for barrel heating, preconditioning, and product expansion. CPE provides steam supply design for extruder conditioning, dryer and cooler burner system engineering, and dust collection for post-extrusion handling.

Evaporation & Concentration. Juice concentration, tomato paste production, dairy ingredient processing, and sugar syrup manufacturing use multiple-effect evaporators, MVR systems, and thin-film evaporators. CPE provides steam supply design, evaporator energy optimization, and heat recovery from evaporator condensate and vapor streams.

Boiler House & Steam Systems. Food manufacturing boiler houses range from a single 200 HP fire-tube boiler in a small bakery to multiple 80,000 lb/hr water-tube boilers in a large prepared foods plant. CPE provides the full spectrum of boiler house engineering - selection, specification, performance assessment, efficiency optimization, multi-boiler sequencing, steam distribution design, condensate return optimization, steam trap management, insulation assessment, feedwater treatment evaluation, blowdown heat recovery, and fuel conversion feasibility studies.

Dust Collection & Explosion Protection. Food manufacturing generates combustible dusts across a wide range of operations - flour and grain handling, sugar dust, starch, spice grinding, cocoa powder, powdered milk, and dried ingredient blending. CPE provides dust collection system design, DHA per NFPA 652, explosion protection per NFPA 68 and NFPA 69, and compliance with NFPA 61.

Waste Heat Recovery. Food plants reject heat from oven exhaust, dryer exhaust, refrigeration condensers, boiler stack gas, compressor aftercoolers, and sterilizer cooling water. CPE evaluates each of these waste heat streams and designs recovery systems - economizers, air-to-air heat exchangers, run-around loops, heat pump integration - that return energy to the process. The payback on waste heat recovery in food plants is often among the shortest of any capital improvement, because these facilities operate at high utilization rates and fuel is a significant operating cost.

Emissions Compliance. Food manufacturing emissions sources include boiler and combustion equipment, oven and dryer exhaust, rendering and cooking exhaust, and material handling systems. CPE designs emissions control systems appropriate to each source and ensures that integrated facility emissions comply with applicable EPA and state air quality requirements.

Codes, Standards & Regulatory Familiarity

CPE executes food and beverage work under the full range of applicable codes and standards, including ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (Sections I, II, IV, VIII), NFPA 85, NFPA 86, NFPA 61, NFPA 652, NFPA 68, NFPA 69, NFPA 36, EPA NSPS and NESHAP programs, state air permitting programs, OSHA combustible dust and process safety requirements, FDA and USDA requirements as they intersect with steam quality and facility design, and 3-A Sanitary Standards where applicable to steam-in-contact-with-product applications.

Why CPE

Food plants run on tight schedules with zero tolerance for contamination and limited windows for engineering work. Sanitation shutdowns are measured in hours, seasonal campaigns dictate when capital work can happen, and production managers push back hard on anything that threatens throughput. CPE designs and schedules around these constraints because the firm has worked inside them - in sugar mills during grinding season, in rendering plants that never stop, in dairy operations where a four-hour maintenance window is a luxury.

The combination of combustion engineering, steam system expertise, dust collection and explosion protection, and emissions compliance - delivered by a firm that understands the operational rhythm of food manufacturing - is what sets CPE apart in this sector.

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