The Problem
The organic and regenerative agriculture market faces a structural disconnect between mineral availability and agronomic performance. Essential soil minerals are often poorly validated, inconsistently regulated, and typically sold as low-value commodities. At the same time, premium organic fertilizers command high retail prices despite limited mineral density, inconsistent sourcing, and rising input costs.
When high–mineral-content materials are properly validated and incorporated into organic fertilizer formulations, both farm and garden users consistently observe improved soil structure, enhanced microbial activity, more efficient nutrient cycling, and stronger plant vigor—outcomes that align directly with established regenerative agriculture principles focused on rebuilding soil biology rather than merely feeding plants.
This disconnect results in unstable margins for producers, limited differentiation at retail, and skepticism from regulators, lenders, and sophisticated buyers regarding mineral claims and product efficacy.