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  2. ICL Group Ltd. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICL_Group_Ltd.

    It is a manufacturer of specialty fertilizers and specialty phosphates, flame retardants and water treatment solutions. [11] ICL is majority controlled by the Israel Corporation, one of the largest Israeli conglomerates. In addition to the Dead Sea Works, Israel Chemicals mines phosphates in the Negev desert. [12] ICL Group serves customers in ...

  3. Agrochemical - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrochemical

    The most common agrochemicals include pesticides and fertilizers. [25] Chemical fertilizers in the 1960s were responsible for the beginning of the "Green Revolution", where using the same surface of land using intensive irrigation and mineral fertilizers such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium has greatly increased food production. [26]

  4. Controlled-release fertiliser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled-release_fertiliser

    Controlled release fertilizers are traditional fertilizers encapsulated in a shell that degrades at a specified rate. Sulfur is a typical encapsulation material. Other coated products use thermoplastics (and sometimes ethylene-vinyl acetate and surfactants, etc.) to produce diffusion-controlled release of urea or other fertilizers.

  5. CF Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CF_Industries

    CF Industries Holdings, Inc. is an American manufacturer and distributor of agricultural fertilizers, including ammonia, urea, and ammonium nitrate products. The company is based in Northbrook, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, [3] and was founded in 1946 as the Central Farmers Fertilizer Company.

  6. Yara International - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yara_International

    Its product line also includes phosphate and potash-based mineral fertilizers, as well as complex and specialty mineral fertilizer products. [3] [4] [5] The company was established in 1905 as Norsk Hydro — the world's first producer of mineral nitrogen fertilizers — and de-merged as Yara International ASA on 25 March 2004. [6]

  7. Organic fertilizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_fertilizer

    Fertilizers are materials that can be added to soil or plants, in order to provide nutrients and sustain growth. Typical organic fertilizers include all animal waste including meat processing waste, manure, slurry, and guano; plus plant based fertilizers such as compost; and biosolids. [2] Inorganic "organic fertilizers" include minerals and ash.

  8. Seaweed fertiliser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seaweed_fertiliser

    Organic fertilization techniques have lower environmental consequences in comparison to the production of artificial chemical fertilizers, because they use no harsh caustic or organic solvents to produce fertilizer and the seaweed raw material is a renewable resource, as opposed to mineral deposits and fossil fuels needed to synthesize chemical ...

  9. Biofertilizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biofertilizer

    [citation needed] Seaweed-fertilizer also helps in breaking down clays. [ citation needed ] Fucus is used by Irish people as a biofertilizer on a large scale. [ citation needed ] In tropical countries, the bottom mud from dried-up ponds which contain abundant blue-green algae is regularly used as biofertilizer in fields.