Hauert
{{Short description|Swiss fertilizer company}}{{More citations needed|date=July 2024}}{{Infobox company
|name = Hauert
|native_name = Hauert HBG Dünger AG
|founded = 1663
|industry = Fertilizers
|logo = Logo Hauert Dünger.jpg
|logo_size =
|num_employees = about 100
|key_people =
|location = Dorfstrasse 12
|location_city = 3257 Grossaffoltern
|location_country = Switzerland
|website = {{URL|https://www.hauert.com}}
}}
File:Speditionsgebäude Hauert 2008.JPG
Hauert HBG Dünger is the oldest Swiss producer of fertilizers for the horticulture and organic farming, founded in 1663 and located in Grossaffoltern, Canton of Bern.{{Cite web |url=http://www.eirich.com/en/press/97 |title=Press |access-date=2017-04-09 |archive-date=2017-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170410132753/http://www.eirich.com/en/press/97 |url-status=dead }}
History
On 18 June 1663 Adam Hauert received the concession to operate a tannery. Each tanning operation included a dumping bump for crushing the oak bark. But it was also used to destroy animal bones. The peasants brought the crushed bones as fertilizer to the fields.
From the middle of the 18th century onwards, fertilization became more and more important. The Economic Society of Berne supported the systematic collection of manure and urine into manure pits. Since farmyard fertilizers soon could no longer meet demand, the demand for bone meal, marl, and lime rose since the beginning of the nineteenth century. In addition, Justus von Liebig (1803-1873), with his mineral theory of 1840, prepared the way for the fertilizer industry.
See also
References
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Article contains translated text from Hauert HBG Dünger on the German Wikipedia retrieved on 24 March 2017.