Nanotechnology Could Improve Fertilizer

  • 10.12.2022
  • USU

New research from the Utah Water Research Laboratory has found that nanotechnology can reduce the environmental impact of agriculture and may soon provide significant economic benefits.

Traditional fertilizer and pesticides have long been associated with high levels of greenhouse gas emission and severe environmental pollution, such as widespread eutrophication. This has brought scrutiny to agriculture and prompted scientists to consider alternatives or innovations that might mitigate this problem. One such innovation is the use of nanotechnology in developing efficient fertilizers and pesticides.

Researchers at the Utah Water Research Laboratory, working with an international team of scientists, sought to understand if nanotechnology could develop fertilizers and pesticides that produced less greenhouse gasses while also being economically viable. The study, led by Yiming Su of the Utah Water Research Laboratory and USU Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, found that by using nanotechnology, traditional agrochemicals can be transformed into more effective and efficient formula, leading to increased economic benefits for farmers and a lower impact on the environment.

The researchers published a paper in Nature Food describing both the positive effects of nanofertilizers and nanopesticides as well as the need to optimize the new technology for further adoption. While nanotechnology does have the ability to save costs for growers on a smaller scale, it is not yet ready for widespread use.