
Our Partners
Our Partners

Our Network
Intrinsyx Environmental works with companies, governments, nonprofits, and other organizations to address complex remediation challenges on a nationwide scale.
Our partners contribute ideas, support, and guidance to make these projects possible.
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Our Partners

The Arbor Day Foundation (ADF) is a non-profit organization with a mission to inspire people to plant, nurture, and celebrate trees. The ADF collaborates with corporations, government, and other non-profits to restore plant life to areas where they can have the greatest impact on climate, communities, and biodiversity. Their holistic and data-driven approach allows science to show where trees are needed the most. Intrinsyx initially connected with the ADF in 2020 and has been fostering a collaborative relationship with the ADF since then. Intrinsyx’s endophyte technology can add significant value to the ADF’s tree planting projects, largely by increasing survival rates on large-scale tree planting initiatives, improving soil quality, and enhancing microbial biodiversity within the rhizosphere. The ADF’s global reputation and expansive network will result in increased opportunities for Intrinsyx to utilize their endophyte technology and further demonstrate its efficacy to key stakeholders.

Life Green Group (LGG) is a South African company that specializes in landscaping and plant management. The company consists of three subdivisions: Life Landscapes, Life Indoors, Life & Earth. Under the Life & Earth division, LGG provides landscape restoration/rehabilitation, vegetation establishment and management, rehabilitation pilot trials, monitoring and maintenance, land use optimization, mine closure implementation, and mapping and monitoring services. Considering LGG’s relevant capabilities and Intrinsyx’s expanding growth trajectory in the African market, LGG was identified as an ideal partner for Intrinsyx’s Africa-based projects. Partnering with LGG helps Intrinsyx identify indigenous plant species to use in phytoremediation projects, source plants and other materials required for project implementation, and secure personnel for conducting site work.
GreenSoil is a leading expert in soil and groundwater remediation. With offices in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Brazil, GreenSoil has a strong presence in the European Union (EU) and Latin America. Their services and areas of expertise include on-site bioremediation (BioPiles), in-situ bioremediation (microbe injections, biobarriers), in-situ remediation (SVE, MPE, P&T systems, and ISCO). GreenSoil also has a Research & Development division, enabling them to continually explore sustainable biological remediation approaches for ubiquitous and emerging contaminants. GreenSoil’s dedicated approach to bio-based remediation technologies, as well as their footprint across the EU and Latin America, made them an ideal partner for Intrinsyx. As Intrinsyx’s market grows across these geographies, having local resources and expertise will be paramount to achieving project success.

Leachate Management Specialists (LMS) is a small, family-owned business based in the United States. Their focus is on identifying cutting edge, innovative, and sustainable solutions to solid and liquid waste management. LMS incorporates various phyto-technologies into their waste management service offerings, including Phyto-Cell™ and Phyto-Utilization™ technologies which incorporate reuse and repurpose principles in their processes. Combining Intrinsyx’s endophytes with LMS’s process would result in a remarkably effective phytoremediation strategy for landfills and any other sites requiring remediation of waste products. As such, Intrinsyx and LMS have partnered up in order to collaboratively deliver outstanding results on future phytoremediation projects.

Howard Sprouse has been a developer of bioremediation technologies since the mid-1990s, when he worked as a consultant to Battelle’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory assisting with the development of mycoremediation technologies for petroleum hydrocarbons, biological agents, pathogen degradation, and biofiltration of agricultural runoff. Howard also worked for the Department of Botany at the University of Washington, as a research assistant for fungal ecology research in Olympic National Park. He is recognized in the bioremediation industry for commercializing mycoremediation technology and as a developer of remediation technology using biochar. Howard is a teacher and lecturer on mycoremediation at several universities in Washington.