Featuring Fortrex: It Starts With Us
This espisode features compelling stories of Fortrex’s frontline sanitation professionals, as well as the unsung heroes working behind the scenes to keep customers’ plants safe and clean.
Chemistry is more than a line item on a budget it’s a foundational element of food safety, operational efficiency, and brand protection.
Chemistry is more than a line item on a budget it’s a foundational element of food safety, operational efficiency, and brand protection. Yet many facilities struggle with inconsistent usage, overapplication, and a lack of visibility into how chemistry is truly performing. The result is a cascade of hidden costs that impact yield, equipment life, labor, compliance, and ultimately, profitability.
Getting the most from your chemistry requires a holistic approach that blends process control, expert guidance, and real‑time data. Here’s how processors can strengthen their programs and achieve the lowest total cost.
Chemical inefficiency is rarely obvious in the moment. Overuse, underuse, or inconsistent application can quietly erode margins long before anyone notices.
Hidden Costs Add Up:
Most facilities unintentionally use chemistry more than required because more can feel safer. But overapplication has consequences: equipment corrosion, higher maintenance costs, worker discomfort, and inconsistent sanitation outcomes.
Direct food contact interventions carry even greater risk. Incorrect ppm levels can lead to:
Chemical inefficiency touches every part of the operation and processors are often left reacting to problems instead of preventing them.
Even advanced chemistry programs can’t overcome poor process control. The most successful facilities start with a clear, disciplined approach.
Four Steps to Strong Process Control:
Data collection is essential. When teams can see trends across shifts, they make better decisions, maintain consistency, and encourage accountability to adhere to best practices.
A strong partner can deliver on your strategy. Seek out one that understands how to diagnose, prescribe, and optimize your chemical program. Regulatory requirements are constantly changing and under attack by USDA & FDA. Finding a chemistry provider that has a large enough portfolio to pivot on a regulatory status is highly encouraged. Otherwise, if a change occurs, you will find yourself shopping again. A superior chemistry partner should be laser focused on application and data collection. Sanitation and direct food contact chemistry requires a unique level of expertise and experience.
Managing chemistry without data is like running a plant without gauges. You may feel confident, but without accurate data and visibility, you can only react to problems. Real-time visibility into actual usage, PPM levels, and flow rates can be used to identify trends across shits and pinpoint areas will issues. This leads to consistency across shifts and eliminates unnecessary chemical waste.
Efficiency‑Boosting Equipment
These technologies reduce labor, improve micro results, and lower total cost.
A culture of efficiency and safety starts with a ongoing partnership and is connected to outcomes. A highly effective chemistry program signals to auditors, regulators, and customers that the facility:
The right partner brings training, data analysis, regulatory guidance, continuous improvement, and the right product mix.
Achieving the lowest total cost means using the right chemistry, at the right time, at the right concentration. You can only do that when you are making decisions supported by data, delivered through precision equipment, and reinforced by a culture of ownership. When processors embrace a holistic, technology‑driven approach, they reduce waste, strengthen food safety, and lower total cost.
Learn more about how you can optimize chemical use, minimize downtime, and lower your total costs with smarter sanitation and intervention solutions from Fortrex.