The chairman of the co-management committee of the Serra de São Mamede Natural Park (PNSSM), António Pita, explained to Lusa agency that the project, “Boa Terra”, was presented to the entity by a German couple residing in the protected area.
“The couple has lived in Marvão for about a year and presented this very simple but pioneering project in the country to the commission”, which already exists in countries like Germany, he revealed.
The project, “basically, uses the wool from slaughtered animals, turning it into 'pellets' as soil fertilisers”, he added.
For António Pita, who is also mayor of Castelo de Vide, the “great advantage” of this initiative is the use of a by-product of the animal that, often, “has no value and is not used”.
Contacted by Lusa, the company's spokesman, Ricardo Oliveira, explained that the wool is transformed into biological fertilisers through a machine that grinds this product of animal origin.
“The machine will shred the wool into pieces, between four and seven millimeters”, he said, noting that the product is then “compacted at high pressure and sanitized at a temperature of 100 degrees”.
Ricardo Oliveira also explained that the product can then be applied directly to the soil.
According to the official, the project involves an investment “below €250,000 euros” and should be fully operational from June, and create “four to five jobs”.
The president of the PNSSM co-management committee considered that the project has “the great merit” of complying with the principles of environmental sustainability, without producing “any harmful waste” for the environment.
The company is currently obtaining the respective licenses and expects to obtain the certification of a sustainable and organic product.
“The PNSSM welcomes” the coming to the region of this “type of project”, especially those that may have “the natural.pt seal, which is an environmental seal of a product made in a protected area”, said António Pita.
Since when has wool "no value and is just a by product"? "
Why not creating highly sought after organic wool farms, treat the animal as kings, sheer them properly without harm and if it then really must, use some of the animals just for meat at the end of their lives.
Goats, sheep, donkeys, and more are treated like **** during their lives, wool a by product? Male goats a by product but mainly waste and so on... We must learn to live differently !
By Jacques De la Haye from Other on 14 Feb 2022, 20:13
Meanwhile, women have to pay a fortune for cotton briefs, paying far more than men who use cotton boxers(from briefs to boxers, more fabric, but men have cheaper cotton underwear???). I´m so sick of this wastage posing as environmentally virtuous. How about using discarded, ruined cotton clothes for this purpose? We women will ruin more briefs than men during our fertile period- think of the removal of sanitary pads from briefs after use; it takes its toll on fabric in a way normal use doesn´t. Yet I have to pay a fortune for less cotton fabric than men. I´m so sick of German hipsters (west Germans, East Germans have a lot more sense when it comes to being frugal and not a silly, air head hipster). USE OLD COTTON CLOTHES FOR THAT PELLETS´PURPOSE, MAKE COTTON BRIEFS MORE ACCESSIBLE AND EQUAL TO WOMEN IN PRICE TO MEN´S, and maybe this will be a good idea, instead of a void, greenwashing, vanity project.
By guida from Lisbon on 15 Feb 2022, 06:47
Great idea! Across the border only 20km away from Castelo de Vide in the Spanish Extremadura we are already producing wool fertilizer pellets. Only waste wool that can't be used for any other purpose from free ranged sheep and obviously exclusively from the yearly shearing and no slaughter products!
By Eva Schuster from Other on 16 Feb 2022, 22:06
why a by product which has no value ??
i am looking since a long time for sheep wool, sheepskin tanned and treated too. why not making good wool which has a lot of uses not only for knitting or clothes but also for isolation etc ?
By uta from Alentejo on 22 Feb 2022, 19:23