Feedstocks

Intermediate crops built for structured supply.

We focus on Camelina sativa and Carinata—industrial oilseed intermediate crops used in second-generation feedstock strategies. Our model is partnership-led: contracting, routing, and documentation are designed to fit buyer requirements.

Feedstocks

Two pathways. One operating standard.

We keep execution simple: structured programs, disciplined partner interfaces, and traceability-ready documentation— without hype.

Camelina sativa

Rotation-friendly intermediate crop

A practical intermediate crop option often evaluated for renewable fuels pathways. We design programs around agronomic fit, delivery windows, and documentation expectations.

  • Program design around regional agronomy and grower onboarding
  • Quality and delivery rules defined early for predictable routing
  • Documentation package aligned to buyer expectations where applicable
Feedstocks Traceability Intermediate crop
Carinata

Industrial oilseed with scale focus

An industrial oilseed intermediate crop used in second-generation feedstock strategies. Our emphasis is on building a program that can scale through structured partnerships and disciplined handoffs.

  • Structured contracting designed for multi-party routing
  • Processing interfaces with sampling, reconciliation, and batching logic
  • Traceability-ready reporting practices designed into operations
Supply programs Partnerships Intermediate crop
Engagement model

Clear steps, clean handoffs.

We keep engagement practical and staged—focused on requirements, execution design, and delivery readiness.

1) Intro + requirementsSpecs, geography, routing, documentation, timeline.
2) Program outlineVolume bands, contracting approach, roles, handoffs.
3) Execution planningOrigin → aggregation → processing interface → delivery pack.
4) Operations setupQC rules, storage, batching logic, reporting template.
5) Delivery + reportingRefinery-gate handoff and documentation package.
Note

Volumes, regions, and timelines are scoped per project and depend on partner availability, agronomic constraints, and buyer requirements.

FAQ

Common diligence questions.

Short answers to what buyers and partners typically ask early.

What do you mean by “intermediate crops”?

Crops grown within an existing rotation framework that can support additional supply without directly displacing primary food crops. Program design depends on local agronomy and grower economics.

Can you provide certified material today?

This site does not claim certifications. Our execution model is designed to be certification-ready where applicable (e.g., ISCC / CORSIA), subject to partner scope and project-specific requirements.

What volumes can you supply?

Volumes are scoped by geography and season and depend on grower participation and routing capacity. We typically discuss volume bands after aligning on requirements and timeline.

Where do you operate?

Germany, Romania, and Kazakhstan. Specific origin and delivery routing is defined project-by-project.

How do you handle traceability?

We design chain-of-custody and reporting expectations into contracting, batching, and partner handoffs. The documentation package is aligned with buyer requirements.

What is your contracting approach?

Structured contracting with clear specs, delivery windows, responsibilities, and handoff points across growers, aggregators, logistics, and processing partners. Terms vary by corridor and partner model.

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Next step

Evaluate a corridor, scope the program, move fast.

If you’re assessing intermediate crops for SAF / renewable fuels, we’ll align on requirements and propose a practical engagement path.

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