Palm trees, grass, fruits seedlings, ornamental plants.
Rock phosphate 28%, rock phosphate 29%, 46% granular urea.
Oil seed and spices.
Fertilizers, DAP, rock phosphate.
Fertilizers, urea.
Egyptian clover seeds, berseem, trifolium alexindrinum.
Fertilizer products, urea.
GSSP,GTSP,DAP,SOP50.
Urea fertilizer, MAP fertilizers, MOP fertilizers, NPK fertilizers.
Organic fertilizers.
Urea 46%, Dap 18 46 And Liquid Ammonia 99.8%.
Ammonia occurs naturally and is produced by human activity. It is an important source of nitrogen which is needed by plants and animals. Bacteria found in the intestines can produce ammonia. Ammonia is a colorless gas with a very distinct odor. This odor is familiar to many people because ammonia is used in smelling salts, many household and industrial cleaners, and window-cleaning products. Ammonia gas can be dissolved in water. This kind of ammonia is called liquid ammonia or aqueous ammonia. Once exposed to open air, liquid ammonia quickly turns into a gas. Ammonia is applied directly into soil on farm fields, and is used to make fertilizers for farm crops, lawns, and plants. Many household and industrial cleaners contain ammonia.
Ammonium nitrate is an industrial chemical commonly used in fertilisers and as an explosive for quarrying and mining. It is an oxidiser considered relatively safe if uncontaminated and stored properly. But it is extremely dangerous if contaminated, mixed with fuel or stored unsafely. A large quantity of ammonium nitrate exposed to intense heat can trigger an explosion. Storing the chemical near large fuel tanks, in bulk in large quantities and in a poorly-ventilated facility could cause a massive blast. The larger the quantity, the more risk it will detonate.
Urea for adblue.
Pumpkins.
Urea.
Raw pumpkin seed kernels.
Urea .
Tree Seedlings.
Urea 46.