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Biological Plant

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Biological Plant 

a self-supporting state enterprise engaged in the manufacture of biological preparations for the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of animal diseases. In the USSR, biological plants were first established in 1930 in veterinary bacteriological laboratories and stations producing vaccines and serums. The early biological plants had a low output and a narrow range of products. By 1970 most of the biological plants were broader enterprises manufacturing eight to ten kinds of biological preparations.



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Marketed as a mini-sewage treatment plant, the latrine is mounted on top of the biological plant so the contents doesn't need to be frequently transferred to another disposal location.
Admixing activated lignite (HOK) with the waste water of the production operations reliably prevents this sludge formation nuisance in the biological plant.
The composting tunnels encourage soiled waste to heat up to 65 degrees centigrade for sterilisation and the mechanical biological plant shreds, sorts and dries material and sterilises any organics sending inert refuse to landfill.
 
 
 
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