Trupointe Makes Major Investment in Indiana Agriculture
Ohio based Trupointe Cooperative has made a multimillion dollar investment in Northern Indiana with a new state of the art facility in Kosciusko County. The facility just outside Milford, IN, is impressive — not only in its size, but in its efficiency. The facility has dry fertilizer storage for 37,000 tons of product. A computerized mixing and delivery system allows a truck to be loaded in 7 minutes. The liquid building features 16 tanks that can store 12,000 gallons each with 13 external tanks that hold in total hold 390,000 gallons. A touch screen computer allows an operator to custom mix an order on the spot. Plant manager Chase Snyder told HAT that the anhydrous ammonia facility holds 150,000 gallons, “We have the ability to load 16 tanks simultaneously in about 15 minutes.” Using highly sophisticated automation, the plant can be operated with a minimum of people and can offer 24/7 self-service for growers. When at full staff, the facility will employ about 50 people, half of what a traditional facility might need.
Getting the products to the growers is another key element of the Trupointe system. Jim Wolf, agronomy sales manager, says the Trupointe hub concept allows this one location to supply product and service to growers in a 60 mile radius. He said Trupointe experts can work individual growers to customize a mix of products that meet a growers specific needs, and then deliver the product directly to the farm within a matter of hours, “This kind of service is becoming more important as farmers become larger and more mobile.” He added, a salesman can be with a farmer in his field, place the order on his wireless device which is sent electronically to the hub at Milford, and, within a matter of minutes, the products are being loaded on trucks and are on their way to the field. Trupointe also offers custom application services. The hub concept lets the application equipment stay in the field, and the hub delivers the exact mix of products to the equipment in the field. Wolf stressed this service is especially good for smaller growers who can get a high level of service without having to invest in equipment. He added this speed and efficiency will become vital as grower margins get tighter and yields become even more important.