Organic fertilizer

Bio-slurry turns waste into soil value.

After biogas is produced, the remaining slurry carries organic matter and plant nutrients back to the field. Used well, it can reduce fertilizer dependence and improve long-term soil health.

Gas for the kitchen. Slurry for the soil. The BioGas Cube creates two useful outputs from the same dung stream: cooking gas and organic fertilizer value.

Cultivation economics

Lower input pressure by returning nutrients to the farm.

1

Collect daily slurry

Slurry is collected after digestion instead of letting dung remain unmanaged.

2

Use as organic manure

Apply it to fodder plots, kitchen gardens or fields based on crop and soil needs.

3

Reduce bought inputs

Regular slurry use can partially substitute external organic manure and support lower cultivation cost.

4

Build healthier soil

Organic matter supports soil structure, microbial activity and better moisture holding.

Soil health

Bio-slurry helps the soil work better, not just the crop look greener.

Improves organic matter flow

Slurry returns decomposed organic material to the field, supporting soil aggregation and root-zone health.

Supports microbial life

Regular organic inputs help maintain biological activity in the soil, especially where chemical-only nutrition has dominated.

Helps moisture retention

Better organic matter can improve water holding and reduce stress in dry spells when combined with good field practices.

Creates visible circular economy value

For gaushalas and farms, cow dung becomes cooking gas first and then fertilizer value for fodder, crops or gardens.

Connect to carbon savings

Use responsibly

Match slurry use to crop, soil and field condition.

Field-use checklist

  • Do not let slurry stagnate near drinking water sources.
  • Use it as part of an integrated nutrient plan, not as a blind replacement for every input.
  • Apply according to crop stage, soil moisture and local agronomy advice.
  • For high-value crops, test soil and observe crop response before scaling application.
  • Keep records of slurry use and reduction in purchased manure or fertilizer.

Planning question

Where will the slurry go every week?

A strong BioGas Cube deployment should plan slurry use from day one. For homes, this may be a kitchen garden or small field. For gaushalas, it may be fodder plots, nearby farmers, manure sales or donor-backed organic farming programs.

01

Homes and dairy farms

Use slurry in kitchen gardens, fodder patches and nearby fields after basic field handling.

02

Gaushalas

Build a campus loop: cow dung to gas for cooking, slurry to fodder and organic manure programs.

Check product specifications See carbon impact

Soil plus savings

Make slurry use part of the deployment plan, not an afterthought.

Plan a deployment
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