Estiércol de caballo: De residuos equinos a negocio millonario
From Manure to Gold: From Equine Waste to Million-Dollar Business
The definitive guide to turning horse manure into a sustainable source of income with a positive environmental impact. From Manure to Gold: Equine Waste Turned into a Millionaire Business.
Did you know that each horse generates between 8 and 10 tons of manure per year? For most equestrian farm owners, manure represents a logistical headache and a significant cost of disposal. But what if that “problem” was actually a gold mine waiting to be exploited? What many consider to be annoying and expensive waste to manage is actually a commodity with an increasing market value.
In Europe, projects such as ManuREfinery are investing more than €7 million in developing technologies to convert livestock waste into high-value products. And no wonder: the demand for organic fertilisers, renewable energies and ecological substrates is skyrocketing. In this article you will discover how to transform equine waste into a millionaire business, with a positive environmental impact and access to preferential financing. Ready to see manure with new eyes?
Picture this: Every morning, you remove tons of manure from your stables and pay for someone to take it away. It’s a recurring expense, a logistical headache, and in many cases, an environmental problem if not managed correctly.
Now imagine that you were paid for that same material. Better yet: imagine if you could transform it into multiple products with different commercial outlets. This is not science fiction; It is the circular economy applied to the equestrian sector.
In Brazil, the animal recycling industry (which includes poultry, pig and cattle waste) mobilizes between R$ 88,000 and R$ 100,000 million per year. The equine sector has similar potential, especially since horse manure is considered the “king” of organic fertilizers.
Meanwhile, in Europe, the ManuREfinery project is developing decentralised biorefineries to convert livestock waste into ingredients for bio-based feed and fertilisers.
The question is not whether manure is worth money, but how much you are missing out on by not taking advantage of it.
To understand the value of equine manure, you have to look at its composition. Not all organic waste is the same, and horse waste has characteristics that make it especially valuable:
Horse manure has a C/N ratio of approximately 30:1, which is considered optimal for composting. This means that it breaks down in a balanced way, without losing nitrogen in the form of ammonia (as is the case with chicken manure) or requiring long maturation periods (such as cow manure).
Horses digest feed less efficiently than ruminants, so their manure contains plenty of semi-digested fibrous material. This fiber acts as a structure in the soil, improving aeration, water retention, and microbial activity. It is, literally, a natural “soil structurer”.
Unlike pig manure, which can contain pathogens dangerous to human consumption if not treated properly, equine manure is much safer. This makes it easier to use in organic farming and reduces treatment costs.
This combination of properties makes horse manure the preferred raw material for organic farmers, nurseries and professional gardeners.
The real magic of the equine waste business is in diversification. The same manure can be transformed into multiple products with different markets and margins:
Well-processed horse compost fetches prices of between €50 and €150 per tonne in bulk, and up to €5-8 per 25-litre bag packaged. It is the base product, with growing demand in organic farming.
Mixed with peat, coco coir or perlite, equine compost becomes a high-quality substrate for nurseries and pot crops. This market pays up to 40% more than bulk compost.
Through an aerobic fermentation process, a concentrated liquid fertilizer is obtained, rich in beneficial microorganisms. It sells for 10-20 euros per litre and is in high demand by organic farmers and urban gardeners.
Anaerobic digestion of manure produces methane that can generate electricity or heat. Companies like JBS already produce 550 million liters of biodiesel a year from tallow and waste. For a farm with 50 horses, a biodigester can generate enough energy for self-consumption and sale to the grid.
The dried and processed manure can be reused as ecological bedding for the livestock itself. It is an incipient market but with potential, especially in farms that seek to close the cycle.
Mixed with other plant waste and pressed, dried manure can be turned into briquettes for biomass stoves. A sustainable alternative to firewood that is well accepted in rural areas.
What for decades was an environmental problem and an operating cost, today is a business OPPORTUNITY with capital letters. Well-managed equine waste:
As the commercial director of the FASA Group, a leader in animal recycling, says: “Our work is fully connected to the concepts of circular economy. Let’s collect a waste that would be useless and transform it into strategic raw materials.” Applying this philosophy to the world of horses is not only possible; it is the future.
The next time you look at that pile of manure on your farm, ask yourself: am I seeing a problem or a million-dollar opportunity?
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