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You can turn agricultural waste into an additional source of income instead of incurring disposal costs.

Fuel briquettes are densely pressed biofuel made from agricultural waste for efficient heating.
Have stable calorific value and low moisture content, ensuring long and even burning.
Usage:
Suitable for solid-fuel boilers, industrial facilities and residential heating.

Fuel pellets are granulated biofuel made from plant-based raw materials for automated heating systems.
Characterized by ease of storage, feeding and stable energy performance.
Usage:
Suitable for pellet boilers, enterprises and households using alternative fuel.

Technical oil is a product of oilseed processing intended for industrial use.
Used as a raw material for the production of biofuel, lubricants and other technical products.
Usage:
Suitable for industrial enterprises, biofuel producers and processing companies.
The client independently ensures the supply of sunflower seeds to the facility.
We accept various types of plant agricultural waste suitable for processing into biofuel or technical products.
Yes, it allows you to convert waste into additional profit and reduce disposal costs.
The cost depends on volumes, raw material quality, and the list of additional services (cleaning, drying, logistics).
Yes, before production launch, the raw materials are assessed by basic quality indicators.

Processing costs are determined individually based on the volume of raw materials, their quality, and the terms of cooperation.
Tolling agricultural waste processing with receipt of finished products and quality control at all stages.
Tolling agricultural waste processing is a practical solution for businesses that want to convert residual raw materials into a clear commercial result rather than let them accumulate. You transfer agricultural waste to our production facilities, and we organize its processing within a contractual model focused on process control, work predictability, and convenience for your enterprise.
This format allows you to treat agricultural waste not as a problem part of production but as a resource that can be brought back into the production cycle. Instead of separately managing accumulation, storage, transport, and processing, you obtain a more integrated cooperation model where key stages are organized within a single facility.
For the B2B partner this means a simpler production route, fewer operational gaps, and greater controllability at each stage. When intake, weighing, quality control, processing, and dispatch work as a unified system, it is easier to plan work, coordinate batches, and make commercial decisions without unnecessary uncertainty.
Transferring agricultural waste for processing is profitable when what matters to you is not simply clearing production space or disposing of residual raw material but obtaining a practical result from it. This approach suits agricultural enterprises, processors, farming operations, and owners of production residues who want to convert agricultural waste into a more useful and commercially clear format.
The solution is especially relevant if production residues accumulate regularly and require systematic management rather than a one-off removal. In such a situation, you need not just a contractor but a partner able to organize intake, raw-material assessment, processing, and finished-product dispatch within a single process.
Agricultural waste processing is also advantageous when you want to reduce your business's operational burden and avoid building a separate direction from scratch. Instead of investing in your own infrastructure, you work with already-operating production facilities where the process is organized and can be adapted to the specific task of your enterprise.
From agricultural waste processing you can receive technical oil as well as pellets and briquettes. This gives you a clear cooperation result before work on the batch begins. You are transferring raw material not into an abstract process but toward a specific production task with a clear direction for further use of the finished product.
For the business this matters practically. Knowing what result can be obtained at the output in advance makes it easier to plan logistics, further product use, commercial decisions, and the batch route itself. That is why the output product section has a direct applied significance, not just a reference one.
We build the process so that agricultural waste functions not as a passive residue but as raw material for obtaining a technical or fuel product. This provides you with greater certainty in your work and allows you to view processing not as an auxiliary operation but as part of a more rational use of available resources.
Agricultural waste and residual raw materials that can be used in a technical or fuel direction are suitable for processing. If your enterprise's priority is to avoid accumulating production residues but to find a practical application for them, this working format allows you to build a more rational approach to the raw material flow.
The practical value of this approach lies in the ability to work not only with the main product but also with what usually falls outside the main commercial focus. As a result, raw material that would otherwise create additional production burden moves into a format where it can be worked with further—as technical oil, pellets, or briquettes.
For processing to be organized correctly, it is important to understand the nature of the raw material, the desired output result, and the logic of further product use from the very start. This is what allows the batch route to be built correctly and unnecessary clarifications during the process to be avoided.
Agricultural waste processing at our production facilities is built as a sequential and controllable process. We first receive and weigh the batch, assess the nature of the raw material, and determine what result needs to be achieved at the output. This allows the subsequent work to be organized correctly from the outset and the batch route to be built without chaotic decisions during the process.
The raw material then undergoes preparation for processing in line with the task set. Depending on the type of agricultural waste and the chosen direction, the process may be oriented toward obtaining technical oil or toward forming a fuel product in the form of pellets or briquettes. This approach allows processing to be built not formally but toward a specific practical result.
For you this means a clearer and more predictable cooperation model. Each stage is linked to the final result, and the process is organized to minimize operational gaps, simplify coordination, and give you more control over batch movement from intake to finished-product dispatch.
Processing price is an important criterion but insufficient to assess the real benefit in B2B cooperation. Looking only at the rate makes it easy to miss factors that then directly affect timelines, batch coordination, work convenience, and the final commercial result. What matters is not only the service cost but how intake, accounting, quality control, storage, logistics, and finished-product dispatch are organized.
A lower price does not always mean better cooperation. If it comes with weak process organization, non-transparent weighing, absent support, or logistics problems, part of the benefit quickly disappears in real operations. In practice this leads to delays, more complex approvals, additional manual control, and excess burden on your team.
That is why when choosing a contractor it is worth evaluating the entire production route: how quickly intake is organized, whether there is a storage base, whether ancillary tasks can be handled within a single facility, how stably the process operates under seasonal load, and whether the output result is clear. In the end, what is advantageous is not simply cheaper processing but cooperation in which you receive predictability, control, and fewer operational risks.
By transferring agricultural waste to our production facilities, you receive not only the processing service itself but a more controlled way of working with the batch. For you this means simpler coordination of all stages, fewer gaps between intake, storage, quality control, and dispatch, and more predictable overall process organization.
We combine processing with ancillary services that are important for B2B cooperation: pelletizing, transportation, storage, weighing, and laboratory quality analysis. This allows you to work with a single facility within one production loop rather than assembling the process piecemeal through multiple contractors.
For your business this means a more convenient and stable interaction model. You can plan batch movement more calmly, coordinate raw materials and finished products more accurately, and reduce operational burden on your team. When agricultural waste processing is performed at real production facilities with proper infrastructure, work becomes simpler and clearer at every stage.
In agricultural waste processing, what matters is not only the production process itself but how precisely intake, accounting, and batch quality control are organized. These stages give you an understanding of what raw material is entering the process, how it is assessed, and how predictable further cooperation will be.
Correct weighing, clear accounting, and quality control help avoid unnecessary disputes and give you greater confidence from the very start of batch work. When key parameters are properly recorded and raw-material movement is systematically organized, it is easier to plan next steps, coordinate logistics, and make decisions without unnecessary uncertainty.
For business this has daily practical significance. Transparent accounting and quality control are not a formality or an add-on service for appearances' sake but the normal foundation for stable B2B cooperation, where predictability, controllability, and calm work with the batch are what matter.
One of the most common mistakes is treating agricultural waste processing solely as a way to dispose of residual raw material. If you do not define at the outset what result you want to obtain at the output, it is harder to build the batch route correctly, agree on the processing logic, and organize the process without unnecessary clarifications once work has begun.
Another typical mistake is focusing only on service price. In practice, a lower rate does not always mean a better commercial result. If it comes with weak intake organization, non-transparent accounting, logistics problems, or absent systematic support, part of the benefit quickly disappears in delays and additional operational costs.
Batch preparation before transfer for work should also be considered. If raw material enters the process without a clear understanding of its nature, the desired processing direction, and the further use of the product, this complicates coordination and makes cooperation less predictable. That is why when working with agricultural waste it is important to evaluate not only the service itself but how systematically the entire cooperation model is built.
Evaluating agricultural waste processing solely by price per tonne is too narrow an approach for a B2B decision. Real cooperation viability is shaped by several factors simultaneously: raw-material intake quality, accounting accuracy, production process stability, logistics, turnaround times, and a clear output result.
In practice, before starting cooperation, it is important to look at the entire batch route: how conveniently intake is organized, whether the output product you want to receive is clearly defined, whether storage and transport can be handled within a single facility, and how stably the production process operates in season. These factors determine whether cooperation will truly be advantageous for your business, not just attractive on paper.
The commercially strong choice is not simply a service with a lower rate but cooperation in which you receive a clear process, a controlled batch, a predictable result, and fewer operational risks. In the longer term, this model gives the business more stability, flexibility, and work convenience.
We structure cooperation so that you can work conveniently with agricultural waste not only at the processing stage but across the entire operational cycle. Intake, accumulation, storage, weighing, laboratory support, pelletizing, and transportation work as part of a single production loop. For you this means fewer gaps between stages, better coordination, and more predictable batch work.
We have over 20 years of experience, 500,000+ tonnes of processed raw materials, 200+ partners, and 98% of orders fulfilled on time. For you these are not just figures but an indicator that cooperation is built on real capacity, a systematic approach, and production discipline.
Working with us, you receive not just a standalone service but a more controlled cooperation model on real production facilities. This is what allows you to plan work with greater confidence, coordinate batches more accurately, and make commercial decisions based on a predictable process.
The main raw material is sunflower husks and other plant agricultural waste suitable for biofuel production.
Processing produces fuel pellets, briquettes, and technical oil depending on the raw material type.
Yes, mixed agricultural wastes are acceptable provided they are suitable for pelletizing or briquetting.
Yes, the company can provide raw material and finished product logistics using its own transport.
Raw material must meet basic technological requirements: acceptable moisture content, absence of significant impurities, and suitability for processing.
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