WSJ article about Kodak processing cow bones for photographic film gel.
January 18, 1999
Company Grinds Cow Remains, But Keeps Costs Close to the Bone
By ALEC KLEIN Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
PEABODY, Mass. -- The stench of death rises from 16-foot-high piles of cow bones chopped up into popcorn-size nuggets. Frank T. Angelakis, perched on a catwalk, grabs a fistful, rubs the pieces between his fingers and grimaces.
"Not the best stuff," Mr. Angelakis says. "It's hard enough. Not porous. But it feels greasy."
This place of decay is actually part of Eastman Kodak Co., which quietly turns the stuff of marrow into memories. Here, Mr. Angelakis is known as the Bone Man. Or Bonehead. His real title is bone-quality coordinator, and he is in charge of making sure everything is rock solid with the 80 million pounds of bovine skeleton that Kodak buys annually from slaughterhouses. The company turns the bones into gelatin used to manufacture film.
Who knew that bones were used in film? "I hadn't a clue," says Paula Lerner, a professional photographer in Boston.
It's unusual that such a plant could continue to exist at Kodak which, like many firms, has learned to contract out functions that aren't a picture-perfect fit. Already, Kodak has farmed out its cafeteria and plant-security operations, and may do the same with its painting and sheet-metal divisions. The company has also seriously considered selling the bone works, known as Eastman Gelatine Corp. To survive, the ivy-covered plant is learning to cut costs as close to the bone as possible.
"This is probably the biggest leadership challenge I've had," says Eastman Gelatine's general manager, Wayne C. Jones. "We've scratched and clawed for pennies." Kodak is requiring plant management to find double-digit cost savings annually, which it did -- barely -- with a 10% cut last year. About 20% of its work force, or 50 people, have been laid off. Overall, Kodak has eliminated more than 10,000 employees and slashed about $730 million in costs to be more competitive and improve the bottom line. But pressure is on to slash more. Last week, the company's stock slid when its fourth-quarter earnings fell short of expectations.
The bone plant is feeling it from all sides. The average market price of cow bone, the plant's raw material, has risen 25% in the past two years to about $400 a ton, driven by soaring demand for gelatin, now used in everything from yogurt to vitamin-pill gel caps. There's something of a "frenzy for cattle bone," says Michael Rempe, vice president of byproducts at Excel Corp. of Wichita, Kan., a major beef processor.
Kodak Founder George Eastman founded the plant in 1930 to have better control over the gel-making. He had nearly been ruined after buying a batch of bones from cattle fed with mustard seed, causing his gel to overexpose the film before pictures were taken.
Today, in this remote corner of Kodak's international empire, 400 miles from headquarters in Rochester, N.Y., the goateed Mr. Angelakis contemplates bovine economies in his cramped, fluorescent-lit office. Longhorns graze on his computer screen-saver. A femur sticks out of a coffee cup. He jots notes on cow stationery. "I'm not obsessed," he insists.
When the slaughterhouse deliveries arrive by rail in Peabody, just a few feet from his office, the bone chips click along a conveyor belt to bubbling vats of hydrochloric acid. There, the bone percolates for a week to remove calcium and phosphate minerals, which are sold as feed and fertilizer. It is then soaked in a murky lime solution for about eight weeks, where it liquefies and is pumped through a series of water tanks and filters, transforming into a syrupy state before it is cooled, like Jell-O in the refrigerator. Then it is dried, ground into a powder and trucked to Kodak headquarters, where it is mixed with other chemicals to create a photo-sensitive emulsion on strips of film.
It is a complicated process that can be slowed down by a screwy bone. (Not all bones are created equal. Male is better than female; young is better than old; longer is better than short; drier is better than wet.) To keep them coming in as bone-dry as possible, Mr. Angelakis, who monitors for grease, sinew and other unwanted remnants, is pushing reluctant suppliers into buying expensive machinery that precleans the bone before it is shipped. If the suppliers deliver greasy bones, which cost more to process, he exacts financial penalties.
Two years ago, for example, Mr. Angelakis devised an incentive program for Kodak's main bone supplier, Monfort Inc. of Greeley, Colo. If Monfort doesn't meet quality goals such as reducing grease and delivering nuggets of the right size, it pays Kodak a penalty of up to tens of thousands of dollars. If the supplier meets the goals, it gets a bonus of a similar amount. In the first year, Monfort paid a penalty, which encouraged the supplier to get a better centrifuge -- a piece of equipment that can cost up to $250,000 -- to remove grease.
Every quarter, Mr. Angelakis flies to Colorado and uses an overhead projector to show Monfort officials the bone-quality performance of its various plants, ranked on such measures as moisture levels and the yield of bone per head of cattle. "I'm trying to motivate everybody to be at the top," he says. Beyond bragging rights and cash incentives, the winner gets a wood plaque with brass plates. "It's like the heavyweight belt," Mr. Angelakis says.
The bone-to-gelatin process once created a lot of waste -- about two million to three million pounds of crusty, mushy residue at the bottom of kettles that had to be thrown away each year. But as there is money to be made in bones, there is money to be made in sludge. Alarmed by the rising costs of disposal, Mr. Jones, the plant manager, came up with what he calls his "garbage-to-gold strategy" -- pumping the muck out of the kettles by machine and turning it into edible gel that could be sold to food makers. For reasons that churn the stomach, this sort of gel needs to be less pure than the kind used in film.
The result: The plant was able to add about 20% to gel production and sell it to third parties. Now the plant has refined the process enough that it can use more than half of the recycled gel for making film. "It went from a liability to an advantage," Mr. Jones says.
Such gains were fine, but the bone works was still bedeviled by rising bone prices. The number of slaughterers equipped to produce chips was limited, and as demand for bone rose, "they had us," says Mr. Jones. "We couldn't say no. We'd just say, 'How much?' "
But a year ago, he hired a consultant who found a company that handled dead cows and wasn't selling bone: Anamax Corp., a food-waste recycling business in Green Bay, Wis. Kodak taught Anamax how to separate cattle meat from bone, clean it and sell it at a lower price than current suppliers, thus giving the plant leverage with its other bone dealers. Most of them agreed to price cuts late in the year.
As for other attempts to diversify sourcing, Kodak was able to grow genetically engineered bone in the lab -- but it proved too expensive. Pig bones are too greasy, chicken bones too small. "People say, 'Why can't you just use rat tails?' " says Mr. Jones. "But there's not enough of them."
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