GCB Bioenergy (Dec 2019)

Improving phosphorus sustainability of sugarcane production in Brazil

  • Amin Soltangheisi,
  • Paul J. A. Withers,
  • Paulo Sergio Pavinato,
  • Maurício Roberto Cherubin,
  • Raffaella Rossetto,
  • Janaina Braga Do Carmo,
  • Gustavo Casoni daRocha,
  • Luiz Antonio Martinelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
pp. 1444 – 1455

Abstract

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Abstract Phosphorus (P) use in global food and bioenergy production needs to become more efficient and sustainable to reduce environmental impacts and conserve a finite and critical resource (Carpenter & Bennett, Environmental Research Letters, 2011, 6, 014009; Springmann et al., Nature, 2018, 562, 519). Sugarcane is one crop with a large P footprint because production is centered on P‐fixing soils with low P availability (Roy et al., Nature Plants, 2016, 2, 16043; Withers et al., Scientific Reports, 2018, 8, 2537). As global demand for processed sugar and bioethanol continues to increase, we advocate that improving P efficiency could become a key sustainability goal for the sugarcane industry. Here, we applied the 5R global P stewardship framework (Withers et al., Ambio, 2015, 44, 193) to identify more sustainable options to manage P in Brazilian sugarcane production. We show that current inputs of P fertilizer to the current crop area could be reduced by over 305 Gg, or 63%, over the next three decades by reducing unnecessary P fertilizer use, better utilization of recyclable bioresources and redesigning recommendation systems. Adoption of these 5R options would save the sugarcane industry in Brazil 528 US$ million and help safeguard global food and energy security.

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