A circular economy for phosphorus in sweden-is it possible?
Journal article, 2021

More sustainable management of phosphorus requires comprehensive understanding of phosphorus stocks and flows. With the purpose of shedding light on the possibilities for an increased level of recirculation of phosphorus in Sweden, phosphorus flows entering and exiting biomass production sectors were quantified along with waste flows, that is, flows that are not currently utilized in biomass production. Relevant waste flows were also characterized in terms of phosphorus concentration, plant availability, contamination and geo-spatial distribution. The theoretical recirculation potential of phosphorus in Sweden was then estimated. The results indicate that there is a large potential for making phosphorus management more circular, especially regarding the utilization of phosphorus in sewage sludge as well as wood ashes from the forestry sector. Moreover, there is a large amount of phosphorus in mining waste that could potentially be used for fertilizer production. It is concluded that the amount of phosphorus in flows fit for recirculation in forestry could more or less balance today’s output. In agriculture, however, recirculation can only sufficiently replace imported mineral phosphorus at current demand if the phosphorus in mining waste is utilized. Thus, if the goal is to replace all of the mineral phosphorus, the agricultural sector also has to become much more efficient in its phosphorus usage.

Nutrient management

Phosphorus management

Recirculation potential

Author

Dag Lorick

Gryaab

Student at Chalmers

Robin Harder

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)

Magdalena Svanström

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Sustainability

20711050 (eISSN)

Vol. 13 7 3733

Subject Categories

Other Environmental Engineering

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.3390/su13073733

More information

Latest update

4/29/2021