AI Article Synopsis

  • Recovered fertilizers (RFs), made from organic waste through thermophilic anaerobic digestion, were compared to synthetic fertilizers (SFs) for growing maize.
  • A life cycle assessment (LCA) showed that using RFs had lower environmental impacts in most categories, with specific benefits in areas like fossil resource scarcity and water consumption.
  • Anaerobic digestion not only generates renewable fertilizers with better properties for crop production but also contributes to energy production, highlighting a sustainable alternative to traditional synthetic fertilizers.

Article Abstract

Recovered fertilizers (RFs), in the form of digestate and digestate-derived ammonium sulfate, were produced from organic wastes by thermophilic anaerobic digestion (AD) at full scale. RFs were then used for crop production (maize), substituting synthetic mineral fertilizers (SFs). Environmental impacts due to both RF and SF production and use were studied by a life cycle assessment (LCA) approach using, as much as possible, data directly measured at full scale. The functional unit chosen was referred to as the fertilization of 1 ha of maize, as this paper intends to investigate the impacts of the use of RF (Scenario RF) for crop fertilization compared to that of SF (Scenario SF). Scenario RF showed better environmental performances than the system encompassing the production and use of urea and synthetic fertilizers (Scenario SF). In particular, for the Scenario RF, 11 of the 18 categories showed a lower impact than the Scenario SF, and 3 of the categories (ionizing radiation, fossil resource scarcity, and water consumption) showed net negative impacts in Scenario RF, getting the benefits from the credit for renewable energy production by AD. The LCA approach also allowed proposing precautions able to reduce further fertilizer impacts, resulting in total negative impacts in using RF for crop production. Anaerobic digestion represents the key to propose a sustainable approach in producing renewable fertilizers, thanks to both energy production and the modification that occurs to waste during a biological process, leaving a substrate (digestate) with high amending and fertilizing properties.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8785226PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c07028DOI Listing

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