by lorenzo » Tue 02 Sep 2008, 20:35:03
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jean_de_Bruxelles', 'H')ello,
I'm a complete newbie in chemical products. I just know that my shampoo and plastics are made with oil. And I was wondering :
Are we gonna miss the chemical fertilizers in agriculture in the long-term future (if no apocalypse occurs) ? How are they made indeed ?
Actually I'm quite against chemicals as a principle, but I've learned from my garden.
Composting is not that easy, it is slow and then I got to burry it instead of just adding a liquid in water... A lot of work and a poor result in my case. So I bought those chemical fertilizers. My ground is poor, the buildings around are eating the sun (I live in Brussels), but since I use chemical fertilizers, most of my plants produce flowers and fruits

So I was wondering how will the agriculture evolve regarding the peak oil ? Not just the use of engines will be modified but I am too ignorant to foresee it. Thanks for answering.
Hi Jean de Bruxelles, I'm from Brussels too. Welcome to the topics of energy and oil. There's lots to learn!
To answer your question:
No, we are not going to miss the fertilizers you are referring to, because we can make them entirely from renewable energy.
As you may know, the only fertilizers that are made from fossil fuels, are nitrogenous fertilizers. They are mostly made from natural gas, because this is the cheapest feedstock.
But you can make these nitrogen fertilizers entirely from renewable energy. All you need is an energy source (hydropower, biomass, wind, solar, you name it), air and hydrogen (can be made from water). So energy + air + hydrogen.
There are numerous examples of companies making nitrogen fertilizers without relying on a single bubble of natural gas. In China, there are many factories that make N-fertilizer from gasified coal. But you can make them from just energy, air and hydrogen.
So no, we're not going to miss them.