Bion’s New Patent Expands Coverage to Industrial and Municipal Waste Streams

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BION ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES INC
BION ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES INC

New York, NY, Jan. 16, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Bion Environmental Technologies, Inc. (OTC QB: BNET), a leader in advanced livestock waste treatment technology and premium sustainable beef, was issued a new patent that broadens its Ammonia Recovery System (ARS) claims to include industrial and municipal wastewater streams.

Bion’s ARS was developed to recover the volatile ammonia in livestock waste streams, with a focus on the discharge from an anaerobic digester (AD), where biogas is produced. Bion just optimized the ARS at its Fair Oaks facility for the final design process for full-scale animal waste systems. With this fifth patent, Bion’s IP now covers organic waste streams from industrial and municipal sources, as well.

According to the American Biogas Council, the U.S. has more than 2,400 AD sites producing biogas today, with a development potential for 15,000 new sites. Bion intends to establish strategic partnerships to market the ARS as a stand-alone AD nitrogen control solution in two sectors:

INDUSTRIAL AND MUNICIPAL WASTEWATER  AD is now used at 1,269 water resource recovery facilities in the U.S., with another 102 stand-alone systems that digest food waste. The Council estimates an additional 8,600 sites with development potential. Germany, by comparison, has almost 10,000 operating AD sites.

In the U.S., wastewater and AD digestate from industrial and municipal sources is already regulated for ammonia and nitrates; EPA recently proposed tougher standards for slaughter facilities. Bion believes ARS ammonia treatment costs will be competitive in these markets and that its unique premium fertilizer byproducts will create an advantage, especially with waste streams that are still considered ‘organic’, like slaughter and food waste.

ANIMAL WASTE  There are 473 animal waste digesters operating in the U.S. today, most on dairy operations. The Council and USDA’s AgSTAR program estimate more than 8,000 additional sites with development potential. The ARS was designed specifically for this purpose: control ammonia from livestock waste and produce the highest value byproducts with it. Bion has already received an OMRI-listing (Organic Material Review Institute) for its initial fertilizer product and is preparing applications for several more.

Digestate from animal waste AD has enjoyed the same reduced regulatory requirements as land applying raw manure. Recent trends in Michigan and California indicate they will treat animal waste digestate as any industrial source, subject to groundwater permitting requirements. Bion believes its proven technology and value-added fertilizers will give it a significant competitive advantage in this evolving market.