Easy Environmental Solutions, Inc. (OTC: EZES) announced results from independent rice trials in Ghana demonstrating that its microbial fertilizer, Terreplenish®, can increase yields by nearly 12% while reducing synthetic fertilizer usage by 50%. The trials, conducted by the Department of Crop Science at the University of Ghana-Legon, showed a 1 metric ton yield increase per hectare, translating to an additional $1,000 in revenue per hectare for farmers. The findings come as the company positions its technology as an alternative to petroleum-based fertilizers and a response to the worldwide nitrogen shortage.
The trials, conducted under irrigated conditions at the Ashiaman Irrigation Scheme in Southern Ghana, also highlighted healthier crop development, improved grain filling, increased spikelet fertility, better nutrient efficiency, and reduced transplant shock. Researchers concluded that Terreplenish demonstrated “substantial agronomic potential” for sustainable rice production while reducing dependence on synthetic inputs. Preliminary economic analysis indicated lower overall production costs compared to a full synthetic fertilizer program.
This milestone marks a critical step toward unlocking a second African market for Easy Environmental Solutions, following an official endorsement from the Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS) last month. The company’s EasyFEN
platform, a modular infrastructure that converts local organic waste into biological fertilizer, can produce over 7,500 gallons of Terreplenish® per day, enough to support more than 25,000 acres of farmland per week. This technology aims to help countries reduce reliance on imported fertilizers and build local production capacity.
“Countries should not have to rely on other nations to dictate pricing, availability, or access to something as essential as food production,” said Mark Gaalswyk, CEO of Easy Environmental Solutions, in the press release. “The next global race may be fertilizer independence.” The company believes that as geopolitical instability and supply chain disruptions persist, fertilizer production will increasingly be viewed as strategic infrastructure.
Unlike many climate-focused technologies that depend on subsidies or carbon credits, Easy Environmental Solutions argues that its economics are driven by local waste streams, fertilizer demand, and agricultural production. According to internal modeling, certain deployments may achieve rapid payback periods depending on scale and regional demand.
The company is currently advancing an active Letter of Intent related to deployment opportunities in Ghana. With projects and partnerships advancing in multiple countries, including Kenya, Malawi, Saudi Arabia, Uganda, France, and several in Asia, Easy Environmental Solutions sees decentralized fertilizer infrastructure as moving from concept to strategic necessity.
“In a more unstable world, countries are rethinking what independence really means,” Gaalswyk said. “First it was energy. Then water. Agriculture is next. The countries that control fertilizer production may ultimately control food security itself.” The company believes future buyers may include ministries, sovereign wealth funds, development banks, and food security programs focused on long-term resilience.
For more information, visit the company’s newsroom at https://tinyurl.com/ezesnewsroom.
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