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Recent Research on Municipal Sludge as Soil Fertilizer in China: a Review

Water Air & Soil Pollution 2023 39 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Bo Zhang, Xingxing Zhou, Xupicheng Ren, Xiaomin Hu, Borui Ji

Summary

Researchers reviewed the use of municipal sewage sludge as agricultural fertilizer in China, concluding that its nutrient content makes it potentially valuable for soil amendment, but that repeated application risks accumulating heavy metals, organic pollutants, and pathogens in soils and food chains — requiring long-term field studies before widespread adoption.

Due to the annual increase in wastewater treatment in most Chinese cities, a major environmental issue has arisen: safe treatment, disposal, and recycling of municipal sludge. Municipal sludge has a high content of carbon and essential nutrients for plant growth; hence, it has gained interest among researchers as a soil fertilizer. This study discusses the potential usage of municipal sludge as soil fertilizer (indicators include nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and trace elements) along with its shortcomings and drawbacks (potentially toxic elements (PTEs), organic matter (OM), pathogens, etc.) as well as reviews the latest reports on the role of municipal sludge in land use. The use of municipal sludge as a soil fertilizer is a sustainable management practice and a single application of sludge does not harm the environment. However, repeated use of sludge may result in the accumulation of harmful chemicals and pathogens that can enter the food chain and endanger human health. Therefore, long-term field studies are needed to develop ways to eliminate these adverse effects and make municipal sludge available for agricultural use.

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