From Waste to Value: Urine and Ash as Sustainable Sources for Green Ammonia and Calcium Phosphate Fertilizers
Zhengyu Li, Eduard Tiganescu, Kevin Böhm, Muhammad Jawad Nasim, Claus JacobTurning waste materials into renewed value is a central aspect of any future circular (bio)economy. Urine and ash are two prominent waste materials produced globally and in considerable amounts each year. Both contain several interesting substances that are so far de facto lost or may even pose a threat to the environment. Urine from industrial-scale farming, for instance, is responsible for significant pollution of soil and groundwater with nitrogen and phosphorous, yet N and P are also high-demand substances in agriculture and industry. Similarly, ash is rich in several interesting metal ions, but is still usually disposed of in a landfill. Using a sequence of simple yet effective biological and chemical processes, it may be possible to convert these two unwanted materials into “green” ammonia and calcium phosphate, both valuable high-demand substances with numerous applications, and with few potentially valuable leftovers still to be dealt with. Eventually, and after considering some of the logistics of the process, such as the collection of materials, this “urinash process” may be upscaled to effectively reduce waste by turning it into renewed value, thus also substituting for—some of—both the energy-intensive synthesis of grey ammonia and the destructive mining for phosphate salts.