Publication | Open Access
The Phosphorus Footprint of China's Food Chain: Implications for Food Security, Natural Resource Management, and Environmental Quality
107
Citations
13
References
2011
Year
EngineeringEnvironmental ImpactsSustainable Food SystemAgricultural EconomicsFood WasteEnvironmental EconomicsManure ManagementP StocksFood ChainFood SystemsSustainable AgriculturePhosphorus FootprintPublic HealthChinese Food ChainSoil FertilityFood PolicyFood SecurityWaste ManagementSustainable ProductionNutrient CycleNatural Resource EconomicsFood Systems SustainabilityFood Waste ManagementFood Chain ProductionNutrient Management
Efficient use of phosphorus (P) for producing food, preventing water pollution, and managing a dwindling rock P reserve are major challenges for China. We analyzed P stocks and flows in the Chinese food chain to identify where P use efficiency can be improved, where P leaks to the environment, and the research, technologies, and policies needed to improve P use. We found a high degree of inefficiency; of 6652 Gg P entering the food chain, only 1102 Gg P (18%) exit as food for humans. The greatest inefficiencies were a large build-up of soil P (3670 Gg P yr; 52% of P inputs) and high P losses to the environment from animal production (1582 Gg P yr; 60% of excreted P). Improving P use in China must focus on national-scale nutrient management strategies, better animal nutrition, and adoption of technologies and policies to reduce P discharges from the animal sector and recycle P as manures in agriculture.
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