Climate-friendly farming: Greenland's melting glaciers offer an answer
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[November 18, 2021]
By Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
NUUK FJORD, Greenland (Reuters) - On a
shore near Greenland's capital Nuuk, a local scientist points to a
paradox emerging as the island's glaciers retreat: one of the most
alarming consequences of global warming could deliver a way to limit its
effects.
"It's a kind of wonder material," says Minik Rosing, a native
Greenlander, referring to the ultra-fine silt deposited as the glaciers
melt.
Known as glacial rock flour, the silt is crushed to nano-particles by
the weight of the retreating ice sheet, which deposits roughly one
billion tonnes of it on the world's largest island per year.
Professor Minik Rosing and his team at the University of Copenhagen have
established the nutrient-rich mud boosts agricultural output when
applied to farmland and absorbs carbon dioxide from the air in the
process.
Scientists at multinational brewer Carlsberg are also investigating and
have found that adding 25 tonnes of glacial rock flour per hectare
increased crop yield on barley fields in Denmark by 30%.
Similarly, researchers from the University of Ghana, managed to increase
maize yields by 30% using glacial rock flour to offset the impact of
rain and heat on poor farmland.
The nano size of the silt's particles is what allows plants more access
to nutrients including potassium, calcium and silicon compared to normal
rocky farmland.
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"We are the stage in this project where we definitely know that it
works," Rosing says. "There are many barriers between this and a big
scale industry, but the potential is definitely there."
His team has asked Novo Nordisk Foundation, owner of drug-maker Novo
Nordisk, to extend its financing of the project.
Following on from the small tests, over the coming three years,
larger-scale field tests are planned in Denmark and Ghana to assess
whether it makes economic sense to ship the material to farmers around
the world.
The scientists also plan to begin testing the material on other soil
types in Australia, France, Italy and the United States next year.
ABSORBING CO2
The tiny size of the silt's particles also helps speed up a natural
process whereby rocks absorb CO2.
When the silt dissolves in rainwater and releases its nutrients, it
undergoes a chemical reaction that locks in carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere. The solution is then washed out with drainage water and
eventually deposited on the seabed as carbonate minerals.
The idea of applying finely-grained rock to farmland is not new and
several studies have shown that by-products from mines or quarries can
improve soil quality. But the method has gained interest due to the
added benefit of absorbing CO2.
"That realisation has been a catalyst for a lot more research in this
area," David Beerling, professor at the University of Sheffield and lead
author of a study on crushed basalt, said.
The study found that spreading finely crushed basalt on fields, as well
as helping crops to grow, removes CO2 from the atmosphere at a cost
comparable to other methods of carbon capture.
Such detailed calculations have yet to be made for glacial rock flour,
but tests by the scientists in Copenhagen indicated that one tonne of
glacial rock flour would absorb between 250 and 300 kilograms of CO2
when applied to fields, potentially allowing farmers to sell that as
carbon credits.
With vast amounts easily available on Greenland's shores, Rosing says it
could be an alternative to sourcing rock dust from mines or mechanically
crushing it.
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![](../images/111821PIX/news_k19.jpg)
Minik Rosing, Professor at University of Copenhagen, poses for a
picture at a site with glacial mud close to Nuuk, Greenland,
September 10, 2021. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke
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The scientists at Carlsberg see it as potentially a
more sustainable alternative to conventional fertiliser.
"It would be good to be able to use it as substitute for nutrients
such as phosphorus that are expected to run out in 50 to 100 years,"
Pai Rosager Pedas, senior scientist at the brewer's research
laboratory.
Glacial rock flour has potential to replace
phosphorus, mainly mined in China, Morocco and the United States, or
potassium, mined in Canada and Russia. However, nitrogen, which is
made from ammonia through an energy-intensive process, still needs
to be added.
EARLY DAYS
Canadian fertiliser company Nutrien says it has looked into mining
and shipping silt from deposits outside Greenland, but found that it
was not economically viable.
"The stage of development of glacial rock flour in Greenland is very
early indeed and we cannot speculate on its potential at this
point," a spokesperson said.
Greenland's new government , which has taken a more careful approach
to developing the country's natural resources, hopes the mud can one
day can bring much-needed revenue as an alternative to dirtier forms
of mining.
"This is a really interesting resource and part of a positive
narrative that we want to tell the world," Resources Minister Naaja
Nathanielsen told Reuters.
"We don't need to blast off the top of a mountain or build a
processing plant," she told potential investors at a presentation in
Nuuk in September.
Government officials will present the mineral at a mining conference
in Vancouver early next year, although they say commercial mining
and use could be years away.
The ministry has received an enquiry from a group of local
entrepreneurs who aim to apply for an exploration permit, a
preliminary stage.
The more onerous process of securing a mining licence would require
detailed studies on the impact on the environment and local society.
"Glacier flour is incredibly interesting, also because of the
volumes. It can easily be shipped to the farmers in containers,"
Verner Hammeken, CEO of Greenland's state-owned shipping company
Royal Arctic Line, said.
The scientists at the University of Copenhagen and the University of
Ghana say success at scale could improve food security and economic
imbalances partly caused by an uneven distribution of good quality
farmland across the world.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2021/Nov/18/images/ads/current/christianvillage_sda_SPONSOR_042720.png)
Geological surveys show that the best farmland, which stretches
across parts of North America and Europe, was covered by ice during
the last ice age.
As is happening in Greenland today, the thick layer of ice ground
and revitalised the soil.
"In Northern Europe, we think the reason we're better off than the
rest of the world is that we are so much smarter than everyone else.
In fact, we just have better soil under our rubber boots," Rosing
said.
(Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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