From organic fertilizer to biostimulant
Raw seaweed has been used in some coastal regions for millennia to improve the productivity of farming systems. In the latter half of the 20th century the use of seaweed extracts on crops became widespread globally. Farmers using these extracts repeatedly reported positive results on crop yield and quality.
As these results could not simply be correlated to the seaweed extract's elemental nutrient content, it took time for a scientific explanation for these effects to catch up. As we have gained a clearer understanding of algal biochemistry and the associated modes of action, we no longer considered seaweed extracts to be fertilizers, and instead classify them as one of the key product classes in the rapidly developing sector of biostimulants.
This extract is concentrated from ascophyllum notosum or a mixture of ascophyllum notosum and kelp, which applies the patented enzymolysis technology to maximize the materials utilization and active substances retaining. So it is pure, natural, organic whose function is super powderful and can be used for fertilizer compounding to greatly reduce the cost or be diluted directly for irrigation.
aliginic acid | color | shape | raw material | package |
40% | green | micro particle | ascophyllum + kelp | 25KG/bag |
40% | brown | liquid | ascophyllum notosum | 200L/barrel |
30% | black | micro particle | ascophyllum + kelp | 25KG/bag |
25% | black | flake/powder | ascophyllum notosum | 25KG/bag |
15-18% | black | flake/powder | ascophyllum notosum | 25KG/bag |
10% | green | liquid | ascophyllum notosum | 200L/barrel |



