NEW YORK, Sept. 29 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Bion Environmental
Technologies, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: BNET) and Kreider Farms announced
today the execution of a contract whereby Bion will build a livestock waste
treatment system at Kreider Farm's Manheim facility that will treat the dairy
waste from the equivalent of 1,900 to 2,000 milking dairy cows. In addition,
the agreement provides for an integrated renewable energy facility that will
provide energy for Bion's waste treatment facility through the combustion of
the cellulose captured in the Bion process. The net effect will be that no
fossil fuels will be required to provide energy to the waste treatment system.
Bion's waste treatment technology has been reviewed and approved by the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PA DEP) to generate
approximately 140 nutrient credits per milk cow's waste treated. Bion
anticipates the sale of these credits under PA's nutrient credit trading
program and they are listed on the PA DEP's Nutrient Crediting Trading website
at www.dep.state.pa.us/river/Nutrient%20Trading.htm#Registry.
The PA DEP nutrient credit program is unique in that credits can be
generated from a non-point source discharger such as a dairy farm, and these
credits can then be sold to a point source discharger, such as municipal waste
treatment plants (MWTPs). The key to the credit trading program is that it
allows lower-cost nutrient reductions from agricultural operations to offset
much more expensive 'last mile' reductions from MWTPs and other point sources,
providing an equally effective reduction in overall nutrients, but utilizing
much more cost-effective solutions.
The non-point to point source trade mechanism is critical to the success
of reducing nutrient loading into Pennsylvania's waterways and ultimately the
Chesapeake Bay because non-point sources contribute more than 50% of the
delivered load of nutrients into the Bay. Pennsylvania needs to reduce its
annual nitrogen discharges to the Chesapeake Bay by 7.5 million pounds. Other
unique aspects of Bion's nutrient credit approval in Pennsylvania include:
-- Bion was able to generate these credits at Kreider Farms because of
their unique ability to verify nutrient reductions, which traditionally has
been a key impediment to the advancement of these types of non-point to point
source trades. The PA DEP reviewed and approved Bion's nutrient credit
verification plan (sampling and measurement definition) as a part of the
credit approval process. Bion is the only company that has received nutrient
credit approval for the installation of an on-site livestock waste treatment
system, as well as the issuance of nitrogen credits for ammonia emission
reductions.
-- More than 40% of the nutrient credits Bion is receiving for its
Kreider Farms project will be generated due to its ability to reduce ammonia
air emissions. This is a key advancement for the industry in verifying the
linkages between ammonia air emissions and downwind nitrogen deposition in
nearby waterbodies.
In addition to generating nutrient credits, Bion's Cleantech project at
Kreider Farms will produce:
-- renewable energy by combusting the biomass captured in the dairy waste
stream as well as the poultry litter from Kreider Farm's poultry operations.
-- greenhouse gas emission credits from significantly reduced methane
emissions associated with Bion livestock waste treatment process, and
-- stabilized nutrient rich fertilizer (low leachability) generated as a
by-product from the dairy waste treatment process.
Absent a trading program where least-cost nutrient credit trades can take
place, the municipal waste treatment plants would continue to spend excessive
amounts of ratepayer dollars to upgrade their facilities. Simultaneously,
non-point sources, with their extremely concentrated waste streams, would be
unable to generate the revenue to fund these on-farm nutrient reduction
projects. Using a trading program, the marketplace can determine the most
cost-effective location to reduce nutrients and the environment will receive
the same net benefit. While Pennsylvania's nutrient credit trading program
rules are unique in their ability to maximize nutrient reduction cost
efficiencies by bringing non-point source dischargers into the program, it is
important to note that many states are also moving in this same direction,
including Ohio, Virginia, Maryland, and many others.
In addition to the municipal wastewater treatment market for credit
trading, Bion believes that its ability to certify nutrient credits is
applicable to a wide range of other applications whereby regions or watersheds
are seeking a least cost means to reduce nutrients that are discharged into
the environment. For example, the electric power industry is now being
challenged with increasing nitrogen concentrations in their wastewater
effluent as they continue to push more of the nitrogen away from their
smokestacks. A recent Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) document
acknowledged that as air pollution control devices have advanced in their NOx
reduction efficiency, there is a corresponding impact on increased nitrogen in
plant effluent that must be managed at the same time.
Mark Smith, Bion's president, stated, "Part of Bion's opportunity is based
on the company's ability to clean-up the waste streams from existing livestock
facilities and to certify nutrient (and other) credits for a wide range of
applications in regions or watersheds that are seeking least-cost methods to
reduce discharges and emissions. Bion believes that its ability to
substantially reduce ammonia air emissions and nitrogen and phosphorus
discharges from livestock waste streams can provide a source of credits to
offset point source discharges in a manner that makes both economic and
environmental sense."
About Bion: Bion has provided solutions to the agriculture and livestock
industry since 1990, with 30 first-generation systems installed through 2003.
Bion's next-generation technology results from 18 years of research &
development, testing, commercial deployment, and further adaptation to
evolving standards and opportunities. In addition to providing proven
comprehensive environmental treatment, the system recovers cellulosic biomass
from the waste stream to produce renewable energy in a process different and
much more efficient than others that seek to exploit this energy source. The
technology is scalable, proven and quickly gaining acceptance by regulatory
agencies and other stakeholders as an effective solution to the environmental
issues associated with concentrated livestock waste. For more information,
see Bion's website: www.biontech.com.
This material includes forward-looking statements based on management's
current reasonable business expectations. In this document, the word
'potential', 'will', 'proposed' and similar expressions identify certain
forward-looking statements. These statements are made in reliance on the
Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, Section 27A of the Securities act of
1933, as amended. There are numerous risks and uncertainties that could result
in actual results differing materially from expected outcomes.
SOURCE Bion Environmental Technologies, Inc.