GRRO News
USDA TO TEST FERTILIZER SYSTEM
Eldora, IA – January 13, 2006
Local
businessman's technology turns waste into product
<>DANA SANCHEZ
Herald Staff Writer><>
BRADENTON - After seven
years of research and
development, local businessman Loran Balvanz and his innovative
waste-to-fertilizer technology caught the attention of the federal
government.>
<>
Balvanz's company, Global Resource Recovery Organization,
turns animal waste into a value-added end product - fertilizer - using
a
cyclonic air drying system called the Tempest.>
The company has just entered into a formal
agreement with
Farm Pilot Project Coordination Inc. and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture to
form a new joint-venture company.
<>The new company will combine private and public resources
in an effort to test Balvanz's technology in the field.>
<>
Funded by an initial outlay of $500,000 from the federal
government, the first beneficiaries of the pilot project will be
farmers who
want to convert their swine, cattle, chicken and turkey excrement into
fertilizer for crops, Balvanz said. Water-laden sludge, feathers, paper
pulp
and animal waste are spun at 700 mph in a hot steel drum. The end
result is
light-weight fertilizer.>
<>
Balvanz first turned a profit selling his Tempest drying
system in 2004 from offices in
Bradenton
and
Eldora, Iowa.
The system, which weighs 75 to 125 tons, is portable and was originally
used to
treat sludge in
Ireland.
Cost of the Tempest system starts at several hundred thousand dollars.>
<>
Up to 95 percent of the volume is spun out of waste
products, Balvanz said. "So instead of a truckload, you've got a
five-gallon bucket to deal with."
>
Farm Pilot Project Coordination Inc., a
Tampa-based
nonprofit designated by Congress to help implement technology that
addresses
the growing problems associated with animal feeding operations, is one
of the
partners in the new venture. The other is the USDA's National Resources
Conservation Service.
<>
William Boyd, head of the animal-waste utilization team
at the USDA office in
Greensboro, N.C.,
said the Tempest system may be a viable solution for handling animal
waste.>
<>
"We're interested in the technology because of the
rapidity and extent that it can dry manure," Boyd said. "It looks
like with further development, we might be able to get an alternative
that can
have some uses. We're trying to see this thing through to its success.">
Bob Monley, general manager of Tampa-based Farm
Pilot
Coordination Inc., is optimistic about Balvanz's system.
<>
"He's an energetic guy and tenacious, and we think
he's doing good things," Monley said. "We're trying to help each
other. We think this product has potential to be commercialized.">
Balvanz, who has owned recycling businesses in Manatee
County for decades, is
ecstatic
about the agreement. "This is more than exciting," he said.
<>
An endorsement by the federal government won't hurt his
business, Balvanz said. "We look at it as we picked up a new $10
million
arm to the company. We know that there's that much business alone in
California
in
San Joaquin Valley
in a 10-square-mile area.">
He hopes to open a third office in California
soon.
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