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Fertiliser from human faeces, urine ‘safe’ on food crops — Scientists

- Source: Sky News

Fertiliser made from human faeces and urine is safe to use in agricultur­e and has “huge potential” to replace 25 percent of current synthetic products in some countries, according to research.

The findings come as farmers continue to struggle with rising fertiliser costs due to a combinatio­n of climate change and the war in Ukraine.

Researcher­s screened human waste for 310 chemicals - including rubber additives, insect repellents and pharmaceut­icals - and only found them in 6.5 percent of the samples examined, but still at low concentrat­ions.

Scientists said low levels of the painkiller ibuprofen and mood-stabilisin­g drug carbamazep­ine were found - but added that someone would have to eat more than 500,000 cabbage heads to accumulate a dose equal to one pill.

Author Franziska Hafner, a student at the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, said products made from human urine and faeces “are viable and safe nitrogen fertiliser­s” and “did not show any risk regarding transmissi­on of pathogens or pharmaceut­icals.”

The work by experts in Germany also looked at modern products already being made from human urine which are turned into ammonium and nitrate.

This included Aurin, which was recently approved for use in agricultur­e in Switzerlan­d, Liechtenst­ein and Austria, and CROP - combined regenerati­ve organic food production - which is part of ongoing space projects to recycle wastewater for future bases on the moon and Mars.

The lead author of the study Dr Ariane Krause, a scientist at the Leibniz Institute of Vegetable and Ornamental Crops in Germany, said: “If correctly prepared and qualitycon­trolled, up to 25 percent of convention­al synthetic mineral fertiliser­s in Germany could be replaced by recycling fertiliser­s from human urine and faeces.

“Combined with an agricultur­al transition involving the reduction of livestock farming and plant cultivatio­n for fodder, even less synthetic fertiliser

would be necessary, resulting, for example, in lower consumptio­n of fossil natural gas.

“Our study results demonstrat­e that nitrified urine fertiliser­s such as Aurin and CROP have a huge potential as fertiliser in agricultur­e.

“They argue for a greater use of these recycled products in the future.”

The peer-reviewed research has been published in the journal Frontiers In Environmen­tal Science and comes amid record-breaking food inflation, with many shoppers struggling with supermarke­t bills.

Last week, a study by researcher­s at Edinburgh University warned soaring farming costs mostly driven by high fertiliser prices could leave an extra 100 million people starving around the world.

The scientists said the cost of fertiliser along with climate change would have the biggest impact on food security and could cause up to one million more people to die from malnutriti­on.

Artificial fertiliser­s are made from or through using fossil fuels - they contribute to global emissions and can be harmful to their immediate environmen­t.

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