A United Nations
study found that fertile soil is being lost at a rate of
24 billion metric tons a year through intensive farming practices. The Joint Research Center of the European
Union noted decreased productivity in as much as 20% of the world’s
cropland. Rangeland that is home to food
animals has experienced 27% productivity loss.
Industrial
agriculture, which relies on intensive farming techniques, has been painted the
villain in the world’s soil productivity problem. Large commercial agriculture has done a good
job of feeding people, but it appears its favorite, value-creating practices
are not sustainable. Soil has not hold
up well under fast crop rotations, limited fallow time, chemical fertilizers
and irrigation.
For example, a
recent study completed by a Dutch agriculture economist at the University of
Abomey-Calavi in Benin, explored the relationship between chemical fertilizer
use soil degradation in cotton fields in Benin.
The study found that fertilization practices in cotton fields in West
Africa were inappropriate and leading to soil nutrient depletion.
Industrial
agriculture is most prevalent in the United States. In the twenty-five years between 1950 and
1975, total farm output increased by more than 50%. This dramatic increase in production has been
attributed to the use of hybrid seeds, increased use of pesticides and chemical
fertilizers. At the same time topsoil
loss has escalated to the point that now ten times more soil erodes from U.S.
fields than is replaced by natural soil formation processes.
It seems
incongruous that what is intended to enhance production actually stifles
it. Chemical fertilizers, especially
nitrogen, can lower pH and make the topsoil so acidic it crop yield is actually
reduced. The use of herbicides decreases
the amount of organic matter in a field that will decompose and revitalize soil
with nutrients. Indiscriminate use of
chemical fertilizers and irrigation has been linked to increased top soil
salinity. The U.S. in particular is
badly in need of alternatives.
Fuel for
Microbes
Farmers could
get help from an innovator like Midwestern Bio-Ag, a
developer and producer of fertilizers, seeds and livestock feed. The company produces a carbon-based
fertilizer it markets as TerraNu. Crop nutrients are embedded in a carbon
matrix of dried manure for immediate or long-term availability for soil
microbes. The product is part of the
company’s pioneering farming system that emphasizes soil chemistry, biology and
structure.
On-farm trials of
TerraNu completed by a third-party in
2018, resulted in increased yield in 86% of the corn fields planted compared to
standard fertilizer. Over 70% of the
trials demonstrated improved nutrient use efficiency. As a group the trials experienced a 12 bushel
per acre average yield increase. Field
trials on soybean and wheat achieved similar results.
In March 2018, General
Mills (GIS: NYSE) announced plans to
deploy Midwestern Bio-AG’s farming system at a wheat farm west of Pierre, South
Dakota. The farm will convert 34,000
acres to organic certification to grow wheat destined for one of General Mill’s
pasta products. Regenerative soil health
practices developed by Midwestern Bio-Ag will be deployed along with the
company’s TerraNu fertilizer.
Midwestern
Bio-Ag raised $15 million in new equity financing in July 2018, bringing total
capital raised to $23 million. The most recent revenue figure that has been
made public for the company was $40 million in total sales in the year
2016. Expect to hear more from field
innovator, especially if the General Mills project is successful. Investors can expect additional opportunities
to get a stake in Midwestern.
One Stop Shop
for Soil
The soil
remediation industry has a friend in Earthworks Soil Amendments with its
broad product line of organic soil conditions, fertilizers and additives. Earthworks also offers soil analysis, tissue
and water analysis services. The organic
fertilizers offered by Earthworks are insoluble and release slowly into the
soil through microbial activity. This is
very different from chemical fertilizers that are inorganic and highly soluble. As a consequence chemical fertilizers release
quickly and often are washed away by rain or irrigation water without ever
being taken up by plants.
As a privately
held company, Earthworks keeps its financial details close to the corporate
vest. There are not even any tidbits of
information on revenue or number of employees that often filter out to the
public. Do not expect many opportunities
to get a share in Earthworks. The company
appears to be well-entrenched in the landscape market of California where
Earthworks is located. More likely than
not the operation has achieved a left of success to be self-funding with internally
generated cash flow.
Bringing City
Sludge to the Farm
Lystek International, Inc. has developed a process for converting wastewater into biosolids and other
organic soil management solutions. Lystek
partners with municipalities with wastewater treatment plants to tap what is
otherwise a cost center into a revenue producing resource. Lystek has developed a low-heat, low-cost
thermal hydrolysis system for anaerobic digestion of biologic material. The system disintegrates microbial cell walls
and hydrolyses complex macromolecules into simple compounds. Deployed in a container directly at the wastewater
treatment plant site, the system does not interfere with an of the other
collection processes.
The Lystek
system produces a high-quality, pathogen-free fertilizer product that is
marketed in the community as LysteGro. The biofertilizer provides farmers with an
economical alternative to build soils low in phosphate, potassium and organic
matter. As much as 75% of the nitrogen
in LysteGro is in a slow-release
organic form that is made available to plants through mineralization over a
period of time.
An operating
agreement with the City of North Battleford, Saskatchewan was recently renewed
with Lystek for another five years. North
Battleford was among the first municipalities to partner with Lystek and the
renewal suggests a successful relationship.
The Lystek system had a capital cost near $3.2 million and initially had
an operating cost near $21 per metric ton.
The Lystek
system is deployed in a number of other Canadian and U.S. communities. Agreements are a mix of municipal ownership
or Lystek ownership. Lystek’s role varies
as well from a simple design-and-build to design-build-operate. In some cases, Lystek is also involved in
marketing the fertilizer product to local farmers, landscapers and gardeners.
The most recent
operating agreement was signed with the City of Guelph in October 2018. Guelph had hosted Lystek’s pilot plant during
the development stage of the system. The
agreement ushers in the deployment of Lystek’s first mobile processing unit
that is particularly good for communities with smaller scale water treatment
plants.
Availability of LysteGro to farmers is limited by the
number and location of communities that set up the Lystek system. Capital costs are competitive with
alternative biosolids handling solutions and revenue from fertilizer products
more than likely fully cover operating costs.
It appears that the greatest limitation to Lystek is not economic. Some proposals have been met with local
opposition concerned about noise, orders and extra traffic that could result because
of the system.
The ability to penetrate its markets is a key to making Lystek International a compelling investment opportunity. So far the company has been run more like an engineering services firm. Limitations on capital may have been one factor that has prevented Lystek from taking equity positions in its projects. Investors may have an opportunity to participate if Lystek management takes that next step in its business model evolution.
The next post in this series on top soil turns to
industrial agriculture. These small
organic fertilizer companies do not seem to be much of a threat. However, industrial agriculture may have another,
more pressing problem.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
1 comment:
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