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Land Application of Biosolids-Derived Biochar in Australia: A Review

Sustainability 2023 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Serhiy Marchuk, Payel Sinha, Payel Sinha, Payel Sinha, Payel Sinha, Serhiy Marchuk, Serhiy Marchuk, Payel Sinha, Peter Harris, Peter Harris, Payel Sinha, Diógenes L. Antille, Peter Harris, Diógenes L. Antille, Bernadette K. McCabe Bernadette K. McCabe Diógenes L. Antille, Bernadette K. McCabe

Summary

This Australian review examined whether converting sewage sludge (biosolids) into biochar through pyrolysis or gasification could safely remove contaminants before the material is spread on agricultural land. Key findings show that thermal processing can effectively destroy persistent organic pollutants, microplastics, and pathogens present in biosolids, and can immobilize over 90% of heavy metals. Biochar from treated biosolids is therefore a safer soil amendment than raw biosolids and could reduce microplastic inputs to farmland from a widely used agricultural practice.

Thermal treatment in Australia is gaining interest due to legislative changes, waste reduction goals, and the need to address contaminants’ risks in biosolids used for agriculture. The resulting biochar product has the potential to be beneficially recycled as a soil amendment. On-farm management practices were reviewed to identify barriers that need to be overcome to increase recycling and examine the role of pyrolysis and gasification in effectively improving the quality and safety of biochar intended for land application. Key findings revealed the following: (1) thermal treatment can effectively eliminate persistent organic pollutants, microplastics, and pathogens, and (2) more than 90% of the total heavy metals content in biosolids may become immobilized when these are converted to biochar, thus reducing their bioavailability following land application. While the reported research on the short-term effects of biosolids-derived biochar suggests promising agronomic results, there is a dearth of information on long-term effects. Other knowledge gaps include the optimization of land application rates, understanding of the rate of breakdown, and the fate of contaminants in soil and water, including heavy metal mobility and redistribution in the environment by processes such as erosion and runoff following land application. An improved understanding of nutrients and contaminants dynamics in soils receiving biosolids-derived biochar is a pre-requisite for their safe use in Australian agriculture, and therefore, it is highlighted as a priority area for future research.

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