NEW YORK, May 5 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Bion Environmental Technologies,
Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: BNET) announced today that its patented technology,
as incorporated in its comprehensive waste management/renewable energy systems
('Bion System' or 'Bion Technology Platform') for existing livestock facility
retrofits or Integrated Projects, directly addresses the key recommendations
of an extensive study on large-scale animal production released on April 29,
2008 by the Pew Commission on Industrial Farm Animal Production. The report
documents the Commission's concerns for unintended risks from large-scale
animal production across four broad areas: public health, the environment,
animal welfare and the quality of rural life.
Further information on the Pew Commission's report on industrial farm
animal production can be accessed at www.ncifap.org.
Bion has developed a patented, comprehensive environmental treatment
technology for livestock waste that significantly reduces nutrient
concentrations in discharged effluent which, in sufficient concentrations,
pollute soil and water. The system simultaneously reduces odor and air
emissions, including ammonia (a cross media - air to soil/water - pollution
issue). The Pew report has identified ammonia as a significant contributor to
the multiple environmental and public health issues related to livestock
waste.
As implemented in a Bion Technology Platform, Bion's technology represents
precisely the kind of new, comprehensive environmental treatment system that
the Pew Commission says is needed. The Pew Commission report points out that
animal waste in large volumes often exceeds the capacity of the land to absorb
the nutrients and attenuate pathogens. Bion's core technology has been
demonstrated to reduce nitrogen and phosphorus levels in farm effluent by 75%
- 80% (up to 95% with extended treatment), while providing an expected
pathogen reduction of three to nine orders of magnitude (three to nine log
kill) depending upon the level of nutrient treatment employed at a particular
site.
Bion's demonstrated ability to significantly reduce air emissions,
including ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, VOC's and greenhouse gases, directly
addresses the public health and animal welfare issues in the Pew report, and
the Bion System's animal housing and multiple daily collections of manure for
treatment eliminates the need for non-therapeutic use of antimicrobials by
dramatically reducing vector transport issues.
A peer-reviewed report (and data) documenting the reductions of nutrient
releases and gaseous emissions produced by Bion's technology is available on
its website at www.biontech.com.
Bion's Technology Platform - a comprehensive environmental management,
food and energy production system - incorporates its patented, demonstrated
environmental treatment technology into project configurations that enable
"closed-loop" integration of livestock, renewable energy and ethanol
production with the efficiencies of scale and the advantage of strategic
location. The result applies the principles of efficient ecological systems to
environmentally sustainable food and energy production.
Bion's Integrated Projects, including its proposed integrated beef cattle,
renewable energy and ethanol project in St. Lawrence County, NY, will
incorporate its proprietary environmental management process. The overall
beef cattle operation - from feed inputs to housing and waste collection
cycles and processing - is designed to promote the growth of high value food
in an environmentally and economically sustainable manner that will not
require antibiotics other than for therapeutic use, as addressed in the Pew
Commission report.
Bion believes that our society has spoken and that the market is seeking
livestock products that are not only organic or natural, but also friendly to
the environment. Existing livestock practices, as documented in the Pew
Commission report, represent a situation where a segment of the business
community has failed to respond to society's demand for change. Food products
generated from a Bion installation will benefit from a dramatically reduced
carbon footprint, reduced water use as compared to similar sized existing
operations and a traceability program that allows for quality tracking and
accountability of the food products produced.
Bion intends to engage the environmental community in an effort which will
help consumers identify such products through 'cross branding' similar to the
recent Sierra Club endorsement of the new Clorox Green products. Bion believes
that consumers' increased ability to identify products produced in an
environmentally sustainable manner will allow consumers to target their
purchases of such products, thereby promoting environmentally sustainable
practices in the livestock industry. The organic industry was and is consumer
driven - product identification and standards were the tools the consumer
needed to support those products.
Bion's technology and business model, when appropriately applied, will
enable environmentally sound livestock products to be delivered to the
consumer. The integrated livestock / ethanol / cellulosic renewable energy
business opportunity is environmentally beneficial, energy efficient and
economically advantageous.
The Pew report has identified ammonia emissions as a major source of the
negative environmental and public health impacts of livestock waste. Bion's
waste treatment technology reduces ammonia emissions in excess of 90%. Bion's
proposed project in the Chesapeake Bay watershed will generate 'nutrient
credits' from reductions of nitrogen and phosphorous releases from a dairy in
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania nutrient trading program
specifically recognizes that ammonia emissions from livestock are a major
contributor to the excess nitrogen concentrations in the Chesapeake Bay via
atmospheric redeposition.
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PA-DEP) has
agreed to grant Bion tradable nitrogen credits based upon its reductions of
ammonia emissions. Bion estimates that approximately 50% of the nitrogen
credits from its PA dairy facility will be based on ammonia reduction. The PA-
DEP will be responsible to certify the reductions and validate the credits for
trading. Upon validation by the PA-DEP, the credits will be available for
purchase by municipal waste water treatment plants. The plants will use the
credits to offset their nutrient discharges in a cap and trade system designed
to meet overall nutrient reductions established as part of the Chesapeake Bay
restoration program, at a significantly reduced cost to Pennsylvania
taxpayers.
Mark Smith, Bion's President, stated, "The Pew Commission on Industrial
Farm Animal Production focuses needed attention on many of the issues
associated with modern livestock production. Bion's technology platform and
business model were developed to address the issues highlighted in the report,
plus provide substantially improved operational and resource efficiencies that
reduce production costs. Bion's Integrated Projects represent the highly-
efficient and environmentally sustainable operations that are needed to
compete in today's world of heightened environmental awareness, high energy
costs and diminishing resources."
About Bion: Bion's patented technology platform largely mitigates the
environmental impacts of livestock facilities, such as dairies and cattle
feedlots. The platform removes up to 95% of the nutrients in the wastewater
effluent and reduces ammonia emissions by greater than 90%. Bion has been
providing solutions to the livestock industry since 1990.
By virtually eliminating the environmental impact of livestock waste,
Bion's technology creates the opportunity to develop sustainable integrated
agriculture operations, comprised of large scale livestock operations balanced
with highly-efficient biofuel production, in locations that maximize market
opportunities. These state-of-the-art facilities incorporate onsite production
and use of co-products - renewable energy produced from the livestock wastes
and the distiller grains from the ethanol process - and produce significant
advantages in environmental, energy and economic efficiency. 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
'projects', 'will', 'believes' 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. Bion
undertakes no obligation to update forward looking statements.
For further information, please visit the Company's website at
www.biontech.com, or contact:
SOURCE Bion Environmental Technologies, Inc.