EasyMining is one of the finalists for world’s largest environmental award

Stockholm, Sept. 15, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --

EasyMining has been announced as one of six finalists for the 2022 Curt Bergfors Food Planet Prize.
EasyMining has been announced as one of six finalists for the 2022 Curt Bergfors Food Planet Prize.

EasyMining has been announced as one of six finalists for the 2022 Curt Bergfors Food Planet Prize.

EasyMining, an innovation company in the Ragn-Sells Group, has been announced as one of six finalists for the 2022 Curt Bergfors Food Planet Prize. The nomination is a recognition of EasyMinings’ technologies for recycling key fertiliser nutrients from waste. The two ultimate winners will each receive a prize sum of 2 million USD, making the Food Planet Prize the world’s largest environmental award.

The entry for the award consists of three separate, patented methods for recovering and recycling the three main nutrients crucial to agricultural fertiliser: Ash2Phos for phosphorus, Aqua2N for nitrogen, and Ash2Salt for potassium. Without these three key nutrients, it would be impossible for farmers all over the world to grow the food we need, especially as Earth’s population is expected to keep growing rapidly.

– Today’s sourcing and handling of these three nutrients is deeply problematic. It contributes heavily to climate change, pollutes the environment, and overshoots crucial planetary boundaries, and creates dependencies. With our methods, we want to contribute to a thorough reform of the entire global food system, says Anna Lundbom, Marketing Director at EasyMining.

  • Phosphorus comes from phosphate mines. In addition to the large climate impact of this extraction method, most of the world’s known phosphate reserves are polluted with heavy metals like cadmium and uranium. Still, the majority of phosphorus-rich sewage sludge goes to waste in landfills. The Ash2Phos technology extracts more than 90 percent of the phosphorus from incinerated sludge, while getting rid of pollutants.

  • Nitrogen fertiliser is produced by fixating nitrogen from the atmosphere. The standard method is more than 100 years old and runs on fossil gas, contributing to enormous greenhouse gas emissions. But the nitrogen in sewage is simply released back into the air by wastewater treatment plants. The Aqua2N technology captures the nitrogen at the plant in a form instantly applicable as fertiliser, creating a loop.

  • Potassium, like phosphorus, is mined, primarily in Canada, Russia, and Belarus. The Ash2Salt technology instead extracts potassium from fly ash, a by-product of energy production from the incineration of waste. Until now, fly ash has simply been landfilled leading to its resources being wasted. The first full-scale Ash2Salt facility is about to start operations near Stockholm, and the technology is available in 12 countries thanks to a licencing agreement with global cleantech company Hitachi Zosen Inova.