News

Ornua opens Saudi Arabia plant

22 Mar 2016

Ornua, Ireland’s largest exporter of Irish dairy products, has opened a new cheese manufacturing facility in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The €20 million facility will manufacture white cheeses for the Saudi Arabian market.

Ornua opens Saudi Arabia plant

Ornua, Ireland’s largest exporter of Irish dairy products, has opened a new cheese manufacturing facility in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The €20 million facility will manufacture white cheeses for the Saudi Arabian market, the fifth largest dairy importer in the world, as well as providing a central hub to access the high growth dairy markets in the Middle East North Africa (MENA) region.

The new facility will use technology developed by Ornua and Teagasc to produce a range of bespoke fresh white cheeses for the increasingly sophisticated bakery sector, retail delis and foodservice customers. White cheeses are said to be hugely popular in the MENA region. The technology allows milk ingredients to be recombined for fresh white cheese production. The facility also includes an Innovation Hub which will be used to co-develop customised ‘white cheese’ solutions with customers. The facility will, said Ornua, provide a direct route to market and value for Irish dairy.

“We are delighted that this inclusive research and development approach by Ornua and Teagasc has proved effective,” said Mark Fenelon, Head of the Teagasc Food Research programme. “The technology underpinning this venture was developed at the Teagasc food research centre, Moorepark and was adapted and managed by Ornua as part of a highly integrated collaborative research program to develop the current suite of local cheeses. It marks a new approach to cheese manufacture involving the production of cheeses from reassembled milk without whey expulsion.”

The Riyadh facility is the latest in a series of significant investments by Ornua, targeting new routes to market for Irish dairy products. The last 18 months has seen Ornua invest in acquisitions and significant infrastructure development in Africa, China, Germany, Ireland, Spain, the UK and the US. It comes just weeks after the acquisition of Ambrosia, a dairy facility in Shanghai, China.