| Literature DB >> 31485920 |
Claudiu-Eduard Nedelciu1,2, Kristín Vala Ragnarsdóttir3, Ingrid Stjernquist4, Marie Katharine Schellens4.
Abstract
Phosphorus (P) is an essential macronutrient in agriculture; however, lack of reporting makes its supply chain a black box. By using literature synthesis on the P challenge, we identify four areas where the reporting process is problematic: P reserves and resources; P losses along the supply chain; P externalities; and access to data. We find that in these areas, the reporting system is inconsistent, inaccurate, incomplete, fragmented and non-transparent. We use systems analysis to discuss implications of reporting on the sustainability of the P supply chain. We find that reporting is essential for the achievement of global P governance and the human right to adequate food. It can also inform decision makers and other impacted stakeholders on policies on agriculture, food security, pollution and international conflict. An improved P reporting process also allows a better evaluation of global sustainability commitments such as the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.Entities:
Keywords: Global governance; Open access data; Phosphorus; Supply chain; Systems analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31485920 PMCID: PMC7028792 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01240-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Researched databases and search strings used for literature review and snowballing
| Researched databases | Search string in databases |
|---|---|
| • Stockholm University Library e-resources | • Phosphorus/phosphate resources |
| • Scopus | • Phosphorus/phosphate reserves |
| • Science Direct | • Phosphorus/phosphate deposits |
| • SciFinder | • Phosphorus/phosphate/fertilizer reporting |
| • SpringerLink | • Phosphorus challenge |
| • National and University of Iceland Library e-resources | • Peak phosphorus |
| • Google Scholar | • Phosphorus/phosphate/fertilizer losses |
| • Food and Agriculture Organisation Statistics | • Phosphorus/phosphate supply chain |
| • World Bank Open Data | • Phosphorus/phosphate/fertilizer externalities |
| • United States Geological Survey—Commodities | • Phosphorus/phosphate/fertilizer pollution |
| • Phosphorus/phosphate + Western Sahara | |
| • Phosphorus/phosphate + conflict | |
| • Phosphorus/phosphate/fertilizer data | |
| • Phosphorus/phosphate governance | |
| • Eutrophication + phosphate/phosphorus | |
| • Eutrophication + fertilizers | |
| • Eutrophication + global, food waste/wastage | |
| • Food waste/wastage + global |
Most common reporting terminology for P as a resource
| Preporting terminology | Definition |
|---|---|
| Phosphate rock (PR); also phosphorite | Rock with a high concentration of phosphates in nodular or compact masses. Here, phosphates can include any of the 200 recognized species of phosphate minerals (Britannica |
| Phosphate rock mineral deposits | A mineral occurrence of PR, sufficient size and grade that it might, under the most favourable of circumstances, be considered to have economic potential (USGS |
| Ultimately recoverable resource | The amount of resource that is eventually extractable—including high grade, medium grade, low grade (Sverdrup and Ragnarsdottir |
| Phosphate rock ore deposit | A mineral deposit of PR that has been tested and is known to be of sufficient size, grade and accessibility to be producible to yield a profit (USGS |
| Phosphate rock reserves, ante-2010 USGS definition | That portion of an identified resource from which a usable mineral or energy commodity can be economically and legally extracted at the time of determination (USGS |
| Phosphate rock reserves, post-2010 USGS definition | That part of the reserve base, which could be economically extracted or produced at the time of determination. The term reserves need not signify that extraction facilities are in place and operative. Reserves include only recoverable materials; thus, terms such as “extractable reserves” and “recoverable reserves” are redundant and are not a part of this classification system (USGS |
| Phosphate rock ore grades (in P2O5 as % of PR) | The concentration of PR within the ore. Grade may exhibit considerable variation throughout the deposit (Britannica |
| Cut-off grade | Grade below which is not profitable to mine PR even though P2O5 is present in the ore (Britannica |
| Phosphate rock Concentrate | Crushed PR after beneficiation (increased P2O5 concentrations) |
PR reporting issues, their effects and proposed solutions
| Preporting issue | Effects | Solution | Actors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Different definitions of reserves and resources | Non-reliability of reserve/resource estimates and incompatibility between reports of different reporting entities | Harmonization of terminology | Reporting entities |
| No differentiation between mineral ore and phosphate concentrate | Can lead to overestimation of reserves/resources | Specification of which of the two is being reported | Reporting entities |
| Lack of reporting due to proprietary data or national security concerns | Non-reliability of reserve/resource estimates | Global governance in reporting for a more transparent reporting | UN, other supra-national institution, global reporting entities |
| Dependence on one publicly available, open access source of annual reporting | Lack of transparency and accuracy of what is being reported and who reports to the reporting entity, non-reliability of data | Open access annual reporting from a number of reporting entities to allow triangulation of results | UN, other supra-national institution, global reporting entities |
Fig. 1Flowchart of the global P supply chain with P losses along the chain. Red arrows represent losses, and coloured squares represent different sectors of the P chain
Reporting issues, solutions and involved actors for the global P supply chain sectors
| P supply chain sector | Reporting issue | Solutions | Actors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prospecting and exploration | Lack of data, different geological exploration methodologies | Improvement and harmonization of exploration methodology, sharing data | Mining companies, geological surveys, state authorities/departments responsible for the mining industry |
| Mining/excavation and beneficiation | Lack of data, considered proprietary data or sensitive information at state level | Sharing data on mining and beneficiation | Mining companies, state authorities/departments responsible for the mining industry |
| Fertilizer processing | Lack of data, considered proprietary data or sensitive information at state level | Sharing data on fertilizer processing and the composition processing by-products | Fertilizer producing companies, national environment agencies |
| Agricultural application | No reporting on the extent of P runoff from agricultural land to water bodies or of P mineralization in soil | Implementation of a P runoff monitoring programme on agricultural lands and reporting on estimates of P mineralization in soil | Farmers, state departments/authorities responsible for agriculture, national environment agencies |
| Post-harvest | Lack of data—in many cases considered proprietary data—on the extent of post-harvest food wastage; no reporting on the extent of P in solid municipal waste | Sharing of post-harvest food wastage data; estimates of the P in solid municipal waste | Food processing companies, retailers, food agencies at state level, municipal authorities responsible for waste, national environment agencies |
Connection between SDGs and reporting on the P supply chain
| Sustainable Development Goal | How reporting on the P supply chain affects reporting on the fulfilment of the goal |
|---|---|
SDG1—Zero poverty SDG2—Zero hunger SDG3—Good health and well-being | - Poverty, hunger and health are related; people in less developed countries spend from 30 to 56% of their budget on food (WEF - Rural population in less developed countries is highly dependent on the productivity of their subsistence and semi-subsistence agriculture, and therefore P input can be essential - Eutrophication through P pollution can negatively affect the use of water for human purposes, including provision of drinking water. It can also negatively impact fishing, leading to decreased food availability and decreasing economic revenues |
| SDG6—Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all | - P pollution as runoff or wastewater effluent/sewage and its associated eutrophication (see section “ |
| SDG12–Responsible Consumption and Production | - High rates of losses along the P supply chain (see section “ |
| SDG14–Life under water | - Eutrophication and dead zones due to P pollution (see Sect. 3.3.1) |
| SDG16—Peace, justice and strong institutions | - Oligopolistic phosphate market moving towards a monopoly with phosphate rock from conflict regions (see sect. “ |