From ashes to fly larvae, new ideas aim to revive farm soil
Send a link to a friend
[January 30, 2023]
By Rod Nickel
WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) - As extreme weather and human activity
degrade the world's arable land, scientists and developers are looking
at new and largely unproven methods to save soil for agriculture.
One company is injecting liquid clay into California desert to trap
moisture and help fruit to grow, while another in Malaysia boosts soil
with droppings from fly larvae. In a Nova Scotia greenhouse, Canadian
scientist Vicky Levesque is adding biochar - the burnt residue of plants
and wood waste - to soil to help apples grow better.
Long-established soil preservation techniques, such as tilling less and
sowing crops during off-seasons, are proving no match for more frequent
droughts, floods and temperature extremes. Soil erosion is depleting
dirt's ability to produce food, and could lead to a 10% loss in global
crop production by 2050, according to the UN's Food and Agriculture
Organization.
New "soil amendment" solutions, which improve the physical properties of
soil, may complement the traditional ways -- if they prove profitable
and effective.
Biochar, liquid clay and fly larvae droppings are all in limited
commercial production. Development of such solutions has accelerated in
recent years as soil degradation worsened, said Ole Kristian Sivertsen,
chief executive of liquid clay company Desert Control, which made its
first commercial sale in December.
Bayer AG, the world's biggest seed company, is among the companies
looking at new ways of regenerating soil through Leaps by Bayer, its
venture capital unit, said Matthias Berninger, Bayer's head of
sustainability.
Bayer and other companies are already working on non-chemical ways to
add nutrients to crops such as adding microbes into soil but products
aimed at regenerating farmland go further. Some, like liquid clay and
biochar add nutrients while also improving the ground's ability to
retain water, and require fewer applications than fertilizer.
"We have really started to focus on the soil in ways we traditionally
wouldn't have done," Berninger said in an interview.
Dark Earths
Biochar is an artificial means of creating a carbon-rich product to
boost soils, modelled after exceptionally fertile patches of Amazon
rainforest called "Dark Earths" that were produced over time as a
byproduct of cooking, animal decomposition and manure.
Biochar could be a "great opportunity" for trapping plant-sustaining
carbon in the soil, Levesque said, adding that biochar also acts like a
water sponge.
Her research, which started in 2012, has shown that clay soil treated
with biochar emitted drastically less nitrous oxide, benefiting the
atmosphere and trapping more carbon in the ground where it can boost
plant growth.
[to top of second column]
|
A tray of Black Soldier Fly larvae
photographed in Malaysia in 2022 at Nutrition Technologies' Malaysia
plant. Nutrition Technologies/Handout via REUTERS
Some types of biochar increased yields of greenhouse tomatoes and
sweet peppers by 32% and 54% respectively, while requiring less
fertilizer, due to biochar spurring reproduction of bacteria that
benefit plant growth.
More research is needed, however, before scientists know how
effectively biochar could regenerate different types of soils around
the world, she said.
Norway-based Desert Control has spent 18 years and $25 million
developing liquid clay to boost soil. Last year, it injected its
product into a patch of U.S. desert, where the clay binds with sand
to better retain water and nutrients.
Preliminary data from a five-year trial showed that in sand treated
with clay, romaine lettuce hearts were on average 21-53% larger than
romaine grown under the same conditions without clay, said Robert
Masson, an official at University of Arizona's Yuma County
Cooperative Extension, who grew the plants.
In November, Desert Control signed a $182,000 contract with
Limoneira Company, which will initially apply liquid clay to 4,000
trees on two of its citrus farms in the drought-stricken states of
California and Arizona. Depending on results, Limoneira intends to
expand application in the fourth quarter.
Each application lasts up to five years.
"Cover crops and no-till are good practices but they are far from
enough," Sivertsen said.
In Malaysia, Nutrition Technologies produces "soil conditioner" from
frass - the waste and skin of Black Soldier Fly larvae. Composted
frass led to a 12% increase in plant-nourishing soil organic matter,
something that otherwise declines over time, according to the
company's research.
Nutrition Technologies, which started in 2015, sells an average of
200 tonnes of frass monthly in Malaysia, mainly to farmers who apply
it to leafy greens, cucumbers and fruit, said Martin Zorrilla, the
company's chief technology officer.
The company raised $20 million in September, its most recent funding
round.
While most Malaysian fertilizer producers now sell frass, volumes
are still too low to draw the attention of global agriculture
companies, Zorrilla said.
"Ultimately, soil is a living system, which is one reason it takes
natural processes so long to build soil and why it is so easy to
lose it," he said.
(Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg; Editing by Caroline Stauffer
and Chris Sanders)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |