
Hazelnut Shell
A high-calorific natural shell used as biomass fuel, sandblasting granule and animal bedding.
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From hazelnut shell to sugar beet pulp, from dried apricot to laurel pellet — our wide product range. Get a quote for every product.
Shells, pellets, granules and biomass fuels. Natural, efficient, economical.


A high-calorific natural shell used as biomass fuel, sandblasting granule and animal bedding.

A shell preferred in the fuel and sandblasting sectors for its high calorific value and low ash content.

A durable shell used in the fuel and sandblasting sectors for its hard structure and high calorific value.

A high-hardness niche shell from the hard pit shell of the Malatya apricot, used in precision sandblasting, cosmetic peeling and fuel.

A hard, durable pit shell valued as a sandblasting granule and biomass fuel.

The hard, dense shell of the pistachio; used as biomass fuel and activated-carbon raw material for its high calorific value.

Light, fibrous peanut shell; a dual-purpose agricultural by-product used both as animal feed/bedding and as pellet–briquette fuel.

A premium biomass pellet produced from the natural laurel plant, preferred for its pleasant scent.

A standard biomass pellet made from high-calorific, low-moisture pine wood, suitable for stoves and boilers.

An eco-friendly natural shell granule, ground for cleaning metal, wood and delicate surfaces.

A carbonized charcoal made from shells; high in carbon, low in smoke and long-burning.

A fuel briquette made from pressed biomass that burns long and efficiently.
Agricultural pulp and pomace products. Natural raw material for animal nutrition.


A feed raw material from sugar factories, high in fibre, preferred for cattle and small ruminants.

A natural feed raw material rich in fibre and energy, obtained from fruit-juice production.

A nutritious feed raw material with high protein value, left over from the brewing and malting process.

A natural feed additive rich in fibre, produced from wine and must production.

A high-energy, palatable moist feed raw material obtained from carrot-processing plants.

A nutritious feed additive containing natural sugar and fibre, obtained from carob processing.

A natural feed raw material high in energy and fibre, left over from mulberry processing.

Rice husk obtained from rice processing, used as animal bedding and fuel.
Dried foods and natural products. From Malatya apricots to Iranian dates.


Sourced directly from Malatya, the apricot capital of the world. Export-quality dried apricot.

The kernel of the Malatya apricot — supplied to the food and cosmetics sectors in sweet and bitter varieties.

Premium dates imported from Iran, soft-textured and naturally sweet.

Naturally dried, no added sugar, dried mulberry rich in fibre and energy.

Export-quality hazelnut from the Giresun region, in kernel and in-shell varieties.

Almond kernel and in-shell almond supply for the food sector.
The key technical reference values of our solid-fuel products in one table. General rule: the higher the calorific value and the lower the moisture and ash, the more efficiently and cleanly the fuel burns.
| Product | Higher Heating Value (HHV) | Lower Heating Value (LHV) | Moisture | Ash |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hazelnut Shell | 4,420 – 4,590 kcal/kg (18.5 – 19.2 MJ/kg) | 3,950 – 4,420 kcal/kg (16.5 – 18.5 MJ/kg) | 5–9% | 1–3% |
| Walnut Shell | 4,400 – 4,900 kcal/kg (18.4 – 20.5 MJ/kg) | 4,000 – 4,400 kcal/kg (16.9 – 18.4 MJ/kg) | 6–8% | ~1.3% (low) |
| Almond Shell | 4,060 – 4,540 kcal/kg (17 – 19 MJ/kg) | ~3,800 – 4,250 kcal/kg (16 – 17.8 MJ/kg) | 4–9% | ~2.2% |
| Apricot Kernel Shell | ~4,900 – 5,100 kcal/kg (20.5 – 21.5 MJ/kg) | ~4,600 – 4,780 kcal/kg (19.3 – 20 MJ/kg) — wood-like | Low (fruit-processing residue) | ~1–2% (low) |
| Peach Pit Shell | ~4,900 – 5,050 kcal/kg (20.5 – 21 MJ/kg) | ~4,600 – 4,780 kcal/kg (19.3 – 20 MJ/kg) | Low | ~1–1.5% (low) |
| Pistachio Shell | ~4,550 – 4,800 kcal/kg (19 – 20 MJ/kg) | ~4,300 – 4,550 kcal/kg (18 – 19 MJ/kg) | Low (dry supply) | ~1.5–3% |
| Peanut Shell | ~4,300 – 4,500 kcal/kg (18 – 18.8 MJ/kg) | ~3,950 – 4,200 kcal/kg (16.5 – 17.6 MJ/kg) | ~7–10% | ~2–4% |
| Laurel Pellet | ~4,300 – 4,650 kcal/kg (18 – 19.5 MJ/kg) | 3,950 – 4,300 kcal/kg (16.5 – 18 MJ/kg) | <10% | <1% |
| Pine Pellet | ~4,550 – 4,780 kcal/kg (19 – 20 MJ/kg) | ≥3,950 kcal/kg (≥16.5 MJ/kg; pine ~19 MJ/kg) | <10% | <0.7% (pine ~0.3%) |
Values are reference ranges drawn from biomass literature; they may vary with the product’s origin, harvest period and moisture. Analysis values specific to the shipment are shared on request.
Pick a fuel and a tonnage; instantly see the total energy that amount provides and its hard-coal equivalent — net energy value, not price.
The calculation is based on the product’s lower heating value (LHV) reference range; the result is a range. The coal equivalent is relative to typical hard coal (~7,000 kcal/kg). Real values vary by shipment; a precise analysis is shared on request.
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