Agricultural utilization definition

Agricultural utilization means the application rate of wastes or sludge or sludge products which shall not exceed the nutrient needs of the crop grown on the particular soil plus the other assimilative pathways in soils (e.g. immobilization with organic material, volatilization, and leachate in compliance with drinking water standards).
Agricultural utilization means the application rate of waste or waste products which shall not exceed the nutrient needs of the crop grown on the particular soil plus the other assimilative pathways in soils (e.g. immobilization with organic material, volatilization, and leachate in compliance with drinking water standards).
Agricultural utilization means the application rate of wastes, septage, sludge or sludge products which shall not exceed the nutrient needs of the crop grown on the particular soil plus the other assimilative pathways in soils (e.g. immobilization with organic material, volatilization, and leachate in compliance with drinking water standards). This term may be used interchangeably with "agronomic rate".

More Definitions of Agricultural utilization

Agricultural utilization means the application rate of wastes products which shall not exceed nutrient needs of the crop grown on the particular soil plus the other assimilative pathways in soils (e.g. immobilization with organic material, volatilization, and leachate in compliance with drinking water standards). The department may require a lower application rate if the design criteria for pathogens, metals or organics contained in these Regulations plus generally accepted technical standards for land treatment technology (e.g. U.S. EPA Process Design Manuals or Overcash, M.R. and P. Pal. 1979 Design of Land Treatment Systems for Industrial WastesTheory and Practice) cannot be achieved at the above application rate. This term may be used interchangeably with “agronomic rate”.
Agricultural utilization means the application rate of wastes products which shall not exceed nutrient needs of the crop grown on the particular soil plus the other assimilative pathways in soils (e.g. immobilization with organic material, volatilization, and leachate in compliance with drinking water standards). The department may require a lower application rate if the design criteria for pathogens, metals or organics contained in these Regulations plus generally accepted technical standards for land treatment technology (e.g.