GRRO News

 

FIRM TO TURN PIG WASTE INTO PROFIT

Manatee County Bradenton, FL January 13, 2004

 

By DANA SANCHEZ, HERALD STAFF WRITER

MANATEE – Loran Balvanz has figured out how to make a silk purse from a sow’s rear.

Global Resource Recovery Organization, headquartered on State Road 70, has entered into an agreement with Iowa based United Suppliers Inc., to build a $650,000 swine confinement facility in Hardin County Iowa that will be like no other.  Swine waste will be turned into a value-added product that can be sold for profit: high-quality organic fertilizer.  The goal is to create a better environment for animals and neighbors. 

The technology has applications for Florida dairy farmers, paper mills, and municipalities dealing with sludge disposal issues, Balvanz said.

Balvanz’s achievement is no laughing matter, but among Iowa’s swine farmers, the jokes abound.  They have to deal with the stench of swine manure, a smell that causes feuds between neighbors and permeates clothing and the skin.  “You wouldn’t last two seconds in there”, Balvanz said.  The smell of waste from dairy farms on hot summer days is familiar to residents living in East Manatee along Upper Manatee River Road.  His new technology has the potential to cut down those problems.

Balvanz’s Tempest Drying System will reduce the odor problems by more than 50 percent and eliminate the need for lagoons and under-building storage of swine waste.

“This is a huge change for the swine farmer and the swine.” Balvanz said.

With the federal government cracking down on pollution caused by over-flowing lagoons and poor air quality inside swine confinement facilities his business aims to capitalize on future legislation.

“I predict that in five years there’ll be regulations controlling the treatment and spread of manure coming from confinement set-ups,” Balvanz said.  “It’s not because mad cow disease is spread that way.  It’s because they can’t tell you it isn’t”.  Balvanz’s system will remove waste automatically from swine confinement facilities two to six times a day using large scrapers.  The material will fall into temporary underground storage, and when the waste reached a certain height, the Tempest Drying System automatically turns on.  The waste is dried using air spinning up to 500 miles per hour in a cyclonic system.  Heated to 200 degrees, the air kills e-coli, and pathogens.  Under only two pounds of air pressure, the system is safe, Balvanz said.  Moisture is atomized, so that what comes out doesn’t smell bad.

Iowa is the No. 1 swine producer in the United States, and Hardin is the No. 1 swine-producing county. 

United Suppliers is a whole-sale distributor and manufacturer of agricultural feed, fertilizer, and chemicals.  Member-owned, United has 822 members in 13 states and does business in more than 2000 outlets.  The company has sales exceeding $500 million.

Anything that reduces the environmental impact for swine farmers is a huge thing, said Cliff Daugherty, division manager of fertilizer with United Suppliers.

“Any time you can reduce the volume of waste, you can make it manageable as a recoverable resource”, Daugherty said.  “Transportation costs are reduced you can transport this material away economically and use it to grow crops.  The implications I’m not sure we know all of them yet, but we think it’s great”.

Balvanz’s system will reduce the volume of pig waste by 90 percent, Daugherty said.  The planned swine confinement facility in Hardin County will consist of two buildings on four acres each measuring 80 by 200 feet, each housing 1,000 pigs.

Balvanz’s technology is unique in that it can be portable, it preserves nutrient and atomizes liquids said Barry Kintzer national environmental engineer for the Natural Resources Conservation Service, a USDA agency in Washington.

Kintzer has visited the Burt Farm site where Balvanz’s system will be built.  “I’ve seen similar systems but never one that is in full-scale operation.” Kintzer said.  “If it works as proposed, it should be a benefit. You’re improving the air, reducing odors, and the solid material will improve soil quality.”

The building will be paid for by United Suppliers, Global Resource and private grants.  Balvanz sees dividends coming down the road rather than instantly.

“United Suppliers isn’t paying Global Resources a dime,” Balvanz said. “But I’m going to have access to 800 members in 13 states.  It’s like having instant and unlimited exposure to the whole agricultural industry.”

His only competition, Balvanz said, is the status quo.  “It’s the existing distribution, how they get rid of the waste right now.  But with all the government regulations, I don’t think we’ll have to worry about that much longer.”

Kintzer agreed.  Given the track record over the past 110 years, he predicts the amount of legislation for waste disposal will likely increase.

For dairy farmers, the Tempest system has applications for bedding.  Many dairies use sand for bedding.  The sand gets hosed out along with manure into large lagoons.  Eventually, the water has to be treated.  A farm with 5,000 head of cattle might spend $30,000 to $50,000 a month on sand.

His system could separate waste from sand and return clean sand to farmers for recycling, Balvanz said.

Arlie Musgrave, co-owner of Musgrave Dairies, said housing cattle is typically a bigger issue a bigger issue in the colder, northern states, than in Florida where cattle often sleep in the pasture.  The idea of having a value-added, end product from animal waste is appealing to him, he said.

“There’s a lot of ideas like that out there that are getting more popular”, Musgrave said.  “Anything that helps the environment is good.  But I don’t think they’ll make it any better than it’s already made.”

Balvanz hopes to demonstrate his system to Manatee County in late spring as a possible solution for drying sludge.  A previous demonstration 18 months ago was unsuccessful because a sticky polymer used by all municipalities to coagulate sewage didn’t allow his machine to work properly, Balvanz said. 

He has adapted his technology to work with polymers and hopes for better results next time, he said.

Dana Sanchez, Herald Business reporter, can be reached at dsanchez@bradentonherald.com or at 745-7080, ext. 4500.

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