Fertilizer

March 19, 2026 09:00 AM CET

Smart crystallization and zero-compromise purity for cleaner and more profitable water-soluble fertilizers.

You are invited into the “engine room” of water soluble fertilizer production, where our experts will show you how evaporation and crystallization can turn your feed acids into high purity, high value products like technical grade MAP (tMAP). 

Instead of just talking equipment, the webinar walks you through real process routes, how you control impurities and crystal shape and how you can design a plant that is both profitable and sustainable over its entire lifecycle.

 

During this Webinar you will:

  • Follow the journey from your phosphoric acid to a bag of tMAP, seeing how GEA combines evaporation, crystallization and smart material selection to keep corrosion, fouling and downtime under control.
  • Discover how different crystallizer designs and energy saving concepts help you hit the sweet spot between product quality, operating cost and investment, whether you are upgrading an existing site or planning a greenfield plant.
  • How GEA supports your fertilizer projects and-to-end with more than a century of evaporation and crystallization experience.
  • Explore multiple effect and MVR based evaporation, full circulation, draft tube and Oslo type crystallizers, and learn when to use each if you want to tune particle size, purity and energy efficiency for your specific fertilizer.
  • How you keep your plant future‑ready by boosting availability and reducing energy use over time with revamps, mechanical vapor recompression and digital tools, so your crystallization plant keeps delivering for decades instead of just the first few years. 

 

The Webinar lasts 25 minutes, followed by a live Q&A session.

We will be hosting this webinar on March 19th at 09:00 AM CET and 04:00 PM CET   

 

Meet the experts:

Laurent Palierne

Director Crystallization, GEA Process Engineering - Kestner

“Delivering a plant is important to us, but also to ensure that we are supporting you throughout this lifetime by ever enhancing its availability when it is up and running.”

Aniss Zenati

Business Development Manager, GEA Process Engineering - Kestner

“If you are consuming water-soluble fertilizers, there is a good chance they have been produced in a GEA crystallization plant.”

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