2018
DOI: 10.1017/s1751731118001039
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Closing the phosphorus cycle in a food system: insights from a modelling exercise

Abstract: Mineral phosphorus (P) used to fertilise crops is derived from phosphate rock, which is a finite resource. Preventing and recycling mineral P waste in the food system, therefore, are essential to sustain future food security and long-term availability of mineral P. The aim of our modelling exercise was to assess the potential of preventing and recycling P waste in a food system, in order to reduce the dependency on phosphate rock. To this end, we modelled a hypothetical food system designed to produce sufficie… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Due to its importance, but also its crucial issues, P is listed as a critical raw material for the EU economy [30]. The criticality is given by two main priority aspects to be considered for P management in Europe: P is a non-renewable resource since a time misbalance exists between P geological cycle (million years) and the anthropic use cycle (daily-annual); moreover, primary P mines are concentrated in few areas (China, Morocco, USA), mostly not belonging to EU, which imports more than 90% of its P demand [31,32]. For these reasons, the sustainable use of nutrients, including P, is a priority for the recent EU strategies [7,8].…”
Section: Phosphorus Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to its importance, but also its crucial issues, P is listed as a critical raw material for the EU economy [30]. The criticality is given by two main priority aspects to be considered for P management in Europe: P is a non-renewable resource since a time misbalance exists between P geological cycle (million years) and the anthropic use cycle (daily-annual); moreover, primary P mines are concentrated in few areas (China, Morocco, USA), mostly not belonging to EU, which imports more than 90% of its P demand [31,32]. For these reasons, the sustainable use of nutrients, including P, is a priority for the recent EU strategies [7,8].…”
Section: Phosphorus Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sludge resulting from anaerobic digestion and the ashes resulting from the thermal processes contain these trace elements, although some volatile components may be lost under processes operating at higher temperatures [96]. This is a very important stage to be considered in the use of biomass, as these minerals are derived from finite resources; hence, their recovery and reuse became of great importance to sustain future food security and long-term availability [97,98].…”
Section: Final Valorization: Energy Production and Nutrient Recoverymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, P represents a crucial building block of the food security system. Regrettably, in practice, P is a non-renewable mineral resource since a time misbalance exists between the geological cycle of phosphorous-bearing minerals (million years) and the anthropic use cycle (daily-annual) [1][2][3][4]. Moreover, primary P mines are concentrated in a few areas (China, Morocco, USA), mostly not belonging to the EU, which imports more than 90% of its P demand.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%