Plastic Fertilizer: Toward Sustainable Waste-Stream Plastics with Low Carbon Content and Cost

Person holding handful of fertilizer

Plastics are indispensable because they provide unique properties such as durability, lightweight strength,聽and versatility that are essential for applications in healthcare, transportation, construction, electronics, and聽food preservation. Since we cannot halt plastic use, we must find ways to handle plastic responsibly. Better聽recycling may help mitigate emissions and depletion of non-renewable resources, but not the growing聽ecological and health threats of microplastics and accumulation in the environment. Biodegradable and聽compostable plastics can mitigate macro and microplastic accumulation, but not greenhouse gas emissions聽since their decomposition still ultimately releases carbon dioxide and methane. Therefore, we must replace聽the ubiquitous 鈥渇orever plastics鈥 with sustainable plastics that degrade fast and harmlessly in the聽wild and minimize emissions by combining high recyclability with low carbon content. 聽

Despite widespread awareness of the crisis, displacing conventional plastics with sustainable alternatives聽has been alarmingly slow because it is extremely challenging to produce recyclable, biodegradable聽plastics that compete with conventional petroleum-based plastics in both performance and cost. Cost-competitive bioplastics lack the robust properties (durability, flexibility, strength) of oil-based plastics, while聽property-competitive bioplastics are too difficult to mass produce due to high costs of raw materials (often聽plant-based sources that compete with food production, raising ethical concerns about land & resource use)聽and less mature production processes. We 聽propose an innovative solution to this trade-off that聽combines low-cost waste streams into sulfur and phosphorus-rich recyclable low-carbon plastics聽with robust properties afforded by the presence of nanostructures that enhance strength & flexibility.

Emergent Nanomaterials Lab

Associated Researchers

Additional Researcher

Merritt R. Turetsky, Director of Arctic Security; Professor, Ecology