More Proof. More Confidence. Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 Does It Again.

For further evidence Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 offers growers a truly predictable performance—an additional study covering the 2021 growing season looked at 344 farmer demonstration locations across 24 states.

PNG-2021-Growing-Season.png
PNG-2021-Growing-Season.png
(Sponsored Content)

For further evidence Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 offers growers a truly predictable performance—an additional study covering the 2021 growing season looked at 344 farmer demonstration locations across 24 states. It found, with a 35-pound reduction of synthetic nitrogen vs. an untreated check, plants treated with Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 had a 5.5% greater nitrogen uptake, resulting in a 7% plant material increase.

Pound-for-pound, growers found they got more from Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 than from any synthetic source.

How is Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 predictable?

  • Doesn’t leach or denitrify
  • Offers a locked-in price
  • Proven performance in multiple studies

Nebraska silage grower Jaycob O’Hanlon had this to say, “I’m using Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 to create a better way to use nitrogen and produce a more profitable crop.”

Bottom Line: Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 is a more profitable and predictable nitrogen source.

For more information about “the better nitrogen,” call your local representative or visit https://www.pivotbio.com/product-proven.

Sponsored by Pivot Bio

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
The study PROVES it: More milk and more beef per acre when applying Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 on corn silage at planting.
A silage study conducted in a dozen demonstration plots across six silage-producing states reveals corn silage treated with Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 produces more milk and beef per acre.
Andrew McCrea conducted field trials using Pivot Bio PROVEN® 40 on his farm. In this article, McCrea summarizes his take on those trials and why he’s reconsidering how he uses nitrogen for the 2022 growing season.
Read Next
As the Strait closure enters its tenth week, supply chain gridlock and policy hurdles suggest high input costs will persist through the 2027 planting season, according to Josh Linville, vice president of fertilizer with StoneX.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App