November-December 2004

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Two Backup Generators Are Better Than One, Dairy Finds

The milkmaid of America's agrarian past is long gone, replaced by automated machinery that depends on reliable power.

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By George Leposky

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Most milking in America now takes place on modern dairy farms that are highly automated factories, efficiently extracting their product from hundreds or even thousands of cows on a rigorous twice-a-day schedule. Any significant disruption of that schedule causes the volume of milk the cows produce to shrink—and that shrinkage goes straight to the dairy's bottom line.

Electricity is vital to the operation of a modern dairy farm such as Shamrock Farms' new milk-harvesting facility in Stanfield, AZ. To help keep its "assembly line" going without a hitch when utility power at Stanfield fails, Shamrock turns to standby power from a 750-kilowatt Gemini Twin Pack diesel generator set from Generac Power Systems Inc. of Waukesha, WI.

The Gemini Twin Pack consists of two 375-kilowatt generators, running in parallel, housed within a single enclosure. Integrated controls combine the output of both generators in normal operation, or allow either to back up the other so the milking parlor's most critical energy-consuming functions can continue even if only one of the generators is operational.

Responding to Growth

Shamrock Farms, founded in 1922, is the largest dairy in the Southwest under family ownership and operation. It produces and distributes a full line of dairy products to major grocery chains, schools, hospitals, and institutions.

To meet the growing demand of Arizona's burgeoning population, Shamrock has been expanding. In 2003 it replaced an older, smaller farm in Gilbert, AZ, with the new Stanfield facility. Located 52 miles south of Phoenix, the Stanfield farm has more extensive shade structures to shelter the cows' feeding and resting areas from the intense desert sun.

Shamrock owns about 1,000 acres at Stanfield, of which the dairy farm occupies 240 acres. The rest is leased to growers of alfalfa, corn, and cotton. The new dairy farm took nine months to build. It opened May 16, 2003.

Although Shamrock maintains a small herd of registered Guernseys at Stanfield, most of the farm's cows are Holsteins, a breed known for its prodigious milk production. Frank Boyce, a Shamrock Farms vice president who is general manager of the Stanfield facility, says the entire bovine population there numbers 15,000–8,500 cows, of which 7,000 are being milked at any given time; and 6,500 calves and heifers under two years of age.

The animals are on a reproductive cycle that ideally results in a calf every 13 months and allows for 11 months of milk production. "Cows have a nine-month gestation cycle," Boyce explains. "During a 60-day post-partum period, we don't allow them to breed. Then we start breeding them again. The ones that get pregnant right away will milk for 11 months, dry off for two months, then get pregnant again." A computer database stores detailed records of each cow's reproductive and milk-production history.

A High-Tech Operation

The milking parlor, an open-sided barn, has four milking lines. Each accommodates 50 cows every 15 minutes. Each cow gets milked twice a day, at the same time each day. "The first time we take a cow to the barn, she stays on that schedule," Boyce says.

As the cows stroll into the milking parlor and take their places, workers on a sunken walkway connect a milking unit to each cow's teats. Instead of milkmaids' fingers, a pulsation system expands and contracts a rubber inflation liner around each teat to squeeze out the milk. Two 35-horsepower pumps create a vacuum that sucks away the milk through stainless-steel pipes. It goes to a receiving tank, then to a plate heat exchanger for cooling from 100°F to 36°F, and finally to three 15,000-gallon storage silos to await transfer into a tanker truck.

"We milk close to 800 cows an hour," Boyce says. "It takes us almost nine hours to milk 7,000 cows. In summer they produce an average of 65 pounds of milk per head per day, in winter about 70 pounds per head per day. That's a total of about 450,000 pounds [roughly 52,325 gallons] of milk a day in summer, and about 500,000 pounds [roughly 58,140 gallons] a day in winter. We ship nine tanker loads a day in summer, 10 in winter, to the main dairy processing plant in Phoenix."

Around the Clock

Milking cows is a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week job, Boyce emphasizes. "It's important to milk them on the same schedule every day," he says. "If you lose electric power, you can't milk the cows, and that's detrimental to their lactation cycle. If you don't milk the cows, if you get too far behind, you're telling the cow that her need to generate milk isn't as great as it used to be, so she cuts back on the amount of milk she gives. You can't get that lost milk back.

"If we get off schedule by an hour or two, we try to speed up the whole process. After three hours we usually don't catch up. We get farther behind, and then start all over, so one group of cows won't get milked the second time that day.

"The loss amounts to a pound or two of milk per head per day. If you figure the loss at 1.5 pounds times 7,000 cows, that's 10,500 pounds a day or 315,000 pounds a month, which in dollar terms represents a loss of about $37,800 a month. We don't want to have that happen."

Inconsistent Power Supplies

The small rural utility serving the Stanfield dairy farm, Electrical District 3, is a distribution system with no generating capacity; it buys all of its power from other suppliers. "We've experienced some inconsistent power supplies," Boyce says politely.

"Shamrock Farms is in a grid-distressed area, far away from the nearest substation," explains Lee Sundquist, project manager at Arizona Generator Technology in Glendale, AZ. The firm, which does business as Gen-Tech, is the Generac dealer serving Arizona and the Southwest.

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The risk of power outages at Shamrock's Stanfield dairy farm is greatest during Arizona's summer monsoon season. From late June through September, high pressure in the Gulf of Mexico spawns southeasterly winds that transport humid air into the desert. The sun's heat warms this moist air, causing it to rise. As it climbs the slopes of the surrounding mountains, it cools and forms billowing cumulonimbus clouds that can unleash violent afternoon and evening thunderstorms.

At other times of year, utility power at Stanfield is relatively stable, with only two or three outages of a few hours' duration. During the monsoon season, however, the farm loses power as frequently as once a week.

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