Fertiliser - from Waste

Our Values

Benefits

A Circular Carbon Economy

Circular Carbon - Delivering Food | Pharmaceutical | Industrial | Environmental | Security

AFC’s circular carbon model is superior to the traditional linear “take-make-dispose” commercial model.

Carbon is not only diverted away from the environment, but carbon becomes a valuable resource, to be recycled and up-cycled into remanufactured valuable products for re-use.

AFC’s urea production system brings structural environmental improvement to mainstream fertiliser manufacturing.

AFC has the technology and capability to produce high-grade urea from carbon-based feedstocks. Industrial, mining, domestic and agricultural carbon resources can be redirected from landfill into the production of high-quality urea.

Whether fertiliser, feed or technical/AdBlue grade, prilled or pelletised, these can all be produced from the same carbon-based inputs. Tyres, plastics, paper, fibre, food residues, biomass and even low-grade coal can all be utilised by AFC as feedstock.

Environment

Consumers expect Industry to deliver strong environmental performance alongside commercial outcomes.

Modern manufacturing focuses on minimising inputs and emissions while maximising output — improving efficiency as well as environmental outcomes.

AFC closes the loop by converting carbon-based resources into high-quality urea fertiliser, supporting production while reducing environmental impact.

For the first time, the Australian fertiliser industry can combine commercial performance with environmental responsibility.

No longer an either–or decision, but the ability to achieve both in parallel — supporting the needs of society while improving environmental outcomes. AFC delivers a balanced, scalable, commercial and sustainable system.

AFC - Triple Bottom Line Delivered

Supporting food security through domestic fertiliser production and circular carbon systems

Environment

Lower-emissions through circular carbon utilisation

Agriculture

Reliable fertiliser supply supporting Australian food production

Industry

Domestic manufacturing decoupled from global markets

Latest News

2026-05-26

Weekly Update – Global Fertiliser Markets – w/e 22.05.2026

A TALE OF TWO MARKETS: Weak Demand vs Tight Supply Markets split between weakening Urea…

2026-05-18

Weekly Update – Global Fertiliser Markets – w/e 15.05.2026

Global Fertilizer Markets Enter Holding Pattern Amid Hormuz Closure Global urea markets appear to be…

2026-05-11

Weekly Update – Global Fertiliser Markets – w/e 24.04.2026

Tight supply and geopolitical risk drive upward price pressure across nutrients. Global fertiliser markets firmed…