Digital Utilities Ventures, Inc. announced the Easy FEN Modular Microbe Fertilizer System, utilizing the revolutionary proprietary soil microbe formula (Terreplenish®) is now available for distribution in both the United States and internationally. The system is essentially a decentralized, fully automatic “Fertilizer Plant in a Box” that can be deployed at rural agricultural co-ops and communities all over the world. The fully automatic system will convert green local waste from each local community into the very valuable Terreplenish liquid fertilizer soil microbe that is then available for local farmers and growers. For field crops, Terreplenish® provides 45-60 lbs of nitrogen credit per acre.

Additionally, it also frees up 15lbs of P205 (legacy phosphorous) per acre, while invigorating root growth. Thus, each EasyFEN system can generate 1/3 of the fertilizer needs for 500,000 acres of corn. According to the USDA there are 92 million acres of corn being raised in the US; this means that 184 EasyFEN modules would supply 1/3 of the fertilizer needs for the entire US corn market! Water retention is also a key benefit. The EasyFEN system has been shown to increase water retention by over 125% - thereby significantly reducing the amount of irrigation needed.

 Traditional petroleum-based fertilizers tie up much of the phosphorus in the soil and can then wash away. By utilizing the EasyFEN system end-product Terreplenish, the nutrients tied up in the soil are made more easily available to the crops and reduces the excess fertilizer run-off which ends up in its water supplies and the Gulf of Mexico. As witnessed by recent events, the global economy has a large impact on access to fertilizer.

Domestic fertilizer output must greatly increase in order to support the USA's large agriculture industry. Typical petroleum-based fertilizer production and transportation from large, centralized plants contributes to atmospheric CO2 and higher logistical costs. By placing smaller decentralized plants directly into these rural agricultural communities, the company can reduce the cost of logistics while also keeping the cashflow within each community rather than many miles away to a centralized distributor.

Currently, the fertilizer market is dominated by a few large corporations which divert money away from rural farm economies. Thus, farmers see the bulk of cost increases due to these global issues, while their community sees none of the profit of the fertilizer industry. By deploying smaller, decentralized plants to each rural agricultural co-op such as the EasyFEN system, wealth can be kept within the local community as well as cut down on prices due to greatly reduced logistical costs.