What You Are Comparing
Black soldier fly (BSF, Hermetia illucens) larvae produce 40-50% crude protein on a dry matter basis. They eat organic waste. They grow from egg to harvestable larvae in 14-18 days. They can be reared in vertically stacked containers that produce 14,000-20,000 kg of larvae per year from a single 20-foot shipping container. This is an industrial protein source that runs on garbage.
Soy is the incumbent. It provides the bulk of the world's plant-based animal feed protein, with global production exceeding 370 million tonnes annually. Soy protein concentrate costs 1,000-1,500 EUR per tonne. It is a commodity crop with decades of optimized logistics, established trade routes, and predictable pricing. Every alternative protein source is measured against soy.
This comparison uses verified data from peer-reviewed research (Journal of Cleaner Production, Waste Management, Animal Feed Science and Technology), facility-level production data (Protix, InnovaFeed, EnviroFlight), and market analysis (Rabobank, Future Market Insights). The question is not whether insect protein is interesting. The question is whether the economics justify displacing soy in real feed formulations, at what scale, and in which market segments.