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Biochar, compost and biochar-compost blend as options to recover nutrients and sequester carbon. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the environmental impacts of using pyrolysis (biochar) and composting in agriculture, particularly focusing on a biochar-compost blend compared to traditional mineral fertilizer.
  • Life cycle assessments were performed using data from experiments conducted in Spain, Italy, and Belgium, analyzing global warming, acidification, and eutrophication effects.
  • Results indicated that the biochar-compost blend had lower environmental impacts than mineral fertilizers and provided similar crop yields, which could enhance its adoption by farmers, though attention to feedstock selection is necessary.

Article Abstract

This work assessed the potential environmental impact of recycling organic materials in agriculture via pyrolysis (biochar) and composting (compost), as well its combination (biochar-compost blend) versus business-as-usual represented by mineral fertiliser. Life cycle assessment methodology was applied using data sourced from experiments (FP7 project Fertiplus) in three countries (Spain, Italy and Belgium), and considering three environmental impact categories, (i) global warming; (ii) acidification and (iii) eutrophication. The novelty of this analysis is the inclusion of the biochar-compost blend with a focus on multiple European countries, and the inclusion of the acidification and eutrophication impact categories. Biochar, compost and biochar-compost blend all resulted in lower environmental impacts than mineral fertiliser from a systems perspective. Regional differences were found between biochar, compost and biochar-compost blend. The biochar-compost blend offered benefits related to available nutrients and sequestered C. It also produced yields of similar magnitude to mineral fertiliser, which makes its acceptance by farmers more likely whilst reducing environmental impacts. However, careful consideration of feedstock is required.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2018.04.061DOI Listing

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