Agromining for nickel: a complete chain that optimizes ecosystem services rendered by ultramafic landscapes.
2016
Echevarria, Guillaume | Baker, Alan | Bani, Aïda | van Der Ent, Antony | Houzelot, Vivian | Kidd, Petra | Laubie, Baptiste | Morel, Jean-Louis | Pons, Marie-Noëlle | Simonnot, Marie-Odile | Zhang, Xin | Laboratoire Sols et Environnement (LSE) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université de Lorraine (UL) | School of BioSciences [Melbourne] ; Faculty of Science [Melbourne] ; University of Melbourne-University of Melbourne | CMLR-SMI ; University of Southern Queensland (USQ) | AE Department ; Agricultural University of Tirana | Laboratoire Réactions et Génie des Procédés (LRGP) ; Université de Lorraine (UL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) | CSIC-IIAG
Serpentine (i.e. ultramafic) outcrops in Europe cover more than 10,000 km2 and have a low-fertility and low-productivity, making them unattractive for traditional agriculture. In general, these areas are slowly abandoned by local farmers, affected by strong rural exodus and landscapes undergo a process of closure. However, ultramafic landscapes have the potential to provide multiple ecosystem services that can contribute to Europe’s goals towards insuring food security, production of renewable raw materials and renewable energy. Phytomining (Agromining) aims at cultivating metal hyperaccumulator plants that are able to accumulate Ni and other strategic elements from metal-rich soils and transport them to the shoots (>1%), which can then be harvested as a bio-ore. Such metal-rich biomass can be used to recover highly valuable metals, e.g. nickel (Ni) and also to produce energy (heat, electricity).Nickel agromining can thus offer an eco-efficient alternative to classical pyro- or hydrometallurgical processes without disturbing the soil cover and the geology from soils and rocks that would be considered as low grade ores or sterile material for conventional mining methods. Phytomining agroecosystems can lead to better soil resource efficiency and can offer a fully integrated, new agromining agriculture that could cover thousands of km2 in Europe, benefit local communities with a sustainable rural development and provide a wide array of ecosystem services which will need to be optimised under a Life Cycle Assessment methodology:1.Production of bio-sourced metal products2.Production of energy biomass3.Restoration of soil fertility for conventional agriculture (Ni stress)4.Limiting Ni intake by local populations and farmers5.Use and conservation of local biodiversity (plant and soil fauna and microflora) as cultivated ecosystems6.Store carbon in cultivated soils7.Enhance pollination activity at landscape level.Nickel agromining could therefore change the economical balance in historically-disadvantaged ultramafic regions of Europe.
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