UK scientists release roadmap for managing phosphorus
Phosphorus is the key ingredient behind all the food we eatPhosphorus is vital element within all animal and plant based food systems. However, since phosphate fertiliser prices remain at very high levels after spiking this year as well as the fact that phosphorus is also one of the main drivers of poor water quality in our rivers and lakes, scientists are calling for urgent measures to manage phosphorus, according to a report from the UK's Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute (AFBI).
In launching the UK’s first comprehensive national transformation strategy into phosphorus, researchers say they are providing a roadmap for how the nation can better manage this important resource.
The strategy outlines a pressing need for new solutions and scaling-up of existing phosphorus innovations to prevent future damage to aquatic biodiversity and habitats, reduce reliance on risky import markets and to unlock new opportunities for agriculture.
“The release of this strategy could not be more timely, as current events are driving home the impact of supply disruptions on prices," said Erin Sherry, principal research economist at the Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute (AFBI) and a co-author of the report. "For Northern Ireland, strategic management of phosphorus is particularly important in terms of improving productivity (getting the same output with fewer inputs) while reducing the environmental impact of food production. Profits benefit because taking full advantage of phosphate stocks reduces fertiliser purchases, and targeted use of slurry to replenish low stocks helps to improve grass growth, which reduces the feed bill as well.”
Phosphorus is a lynchpin within our food system – plants cannot grow without it and it has no substitute.
Crop and livestock production in the UK is almost entirely dependent on imported phosphorus in feeds and fertilisers – the UK imports around 174,000 tonnes of phosphorus annually. Much of these imports derive from phosphate rock from countries including Russia, Morocco and China. The price of phosphate fertiliser quadrupled between mid-2020 and mid-2022 due to supply disruptions and market concentration in China. The ongoing war in Ukraine is serving to highlight the food security risks associated with reliance on imports of critical farm inputs like phosphorus.
Despite volatile prices and supply disruptions, phosphorus use in the UK is still highly inefficient, with less than half of imported phosphorus used productively to grow food. Poor management of phosphorus over decades has led to it being a major contributor to environmental problems. Wastewater discharges, along with excess phosphorus accumulating in agricultural soils and leaching into our rivers, lakes and other waterways, are contributing to issues such as algal blooms.
The ‘UK Phosphorus Transformation Strategy’ – a flagship output from the RePhoKUs project, led by Lancaster University and involving the University of Technology Sydney, University of Leeds, AFBI, UK CEH and funded under the UK’s Global Food Security research programme – sets out the challenges and key steps needed for the UK to adopt resilient, efficient and sustainable management of phosphorus.
“At present the UK does not have a coherent plan for managing phosphorus across the food system, either nationally, regionally or within catchments," said professor Paul Withers of Lancaster University and lead investigator of the RePhoKUs project. "This needs to change urgently."
“Transforming the way phosphorus is used in the UK food system is essential," he continued. "Getting it right provides huge benefits to food and water security, tourism opportunities, and to maintain a clean healthy environment to boost biodiversity and the natural world for generations to come – but it requires all sectors to come on board."
The strategy’s recommendations, co-developed with national stakeholders through extensive consultation with farmers, regulators, policy-makers, food producers, wastewater companies, and environmental managers, highlight a number of priorities to enable the UK to transition towards using phosphorus more sustainably:
- Develop and deploy at scale new technologies and innovations that can recover phosphorus from animal manure, wastewater and food waste, and redistribute as viable, cost-effective and renewable fertilisers.
- Provide incentives that encourage investment in technologies and lower barriers to create new markets for a renewable phosphorus fertiliser sector.
- Improve, align and make coherent policies and governance that recognise and manage phosphorus as a scare resource, as well as a pollutant.
- Provide tailored knowledge, research and advice for farmers on tapping soil legacy phosphorus, and using recycled phosphorus.
- Better engage stakeholders across the whole phosphorus value chain to set strategic direction and support implementation via bespoke and diverse local phosphorus solutions.
- The creation of nutrient stakeholder platform and UK nutrient data sharing dashboards to help inform phosphorus management
Aside from the phosphorus sources in wastewater treatment plants servicing towns and cities, the report highlights that phosphorus is unevenly concentrated across the UK. Where livestock farming is most intensive, predominantly in the west of England and Northern Ireland, then surpluses of phosphorus (largely in manure) are higher. The excess phosphorus applied in England’s North West region alone is equivalent to nearly £30 million of fertiliser.
In areas where arable crops are grown, which tends to be predominantly in the east of the country, there is a deficit and the need to use phosphorus-based fertilisers because crops are taking up more than is applied.
However, the logistics of moving bulky manure from one part of the country to another are impractical. Finding new innovative ways to extract and relocate phosphorus from manure will be key in addressing these regional imbalances.
There is currently billions of pounds of phosphorus locked in UK top soil from decades of applications of fertiliser and manure – accessing and managing this legacy phosphorus ‘bank’ is central to improving efficiency and reducing imports, the team of scientists behind the new strategy argue.
One of the report’s lead authors, Associate Professor Brent Jacobs said: “The good news is there are many pockets of innovation and initiatives already under way in different sectors in the UK. These can be learned from, scaled-up and integrated to help overcome some of the challenges associated with phosphorus use.
“Theoretically there is enough phosphorus circulating in the food system and in our soils. One of the pathways to achieving sustainable phosphorus use will involve developing and deploying new technologies that can extract legacy phosphorus from soils and manures and develop new renewable fertiliser markets.”
The authors highlight the need for all of the different actors and sectors involved in food production, across catchment areas and government departments, which are currently operating in a fragmented manner, to work more closely and to adopt innovative solutions to transition towards using phosphorus more sustainably.
“As the UK food system is undergoing fundamental policy change, our report provides a timely opportunity to integrate urgently needed actions across all sectors of the food chain into regional and national policy and governance, tapping into huge potential wins for the environment and the economy," said professor Julia Martin-Ortega of the University of Leeds and co-author of the report.