
15 Aug 2023 The industrialisation of the Haber-Bosch process
Nitrogen fertiliser fuels climate change, pollutes drinking water — and feeds nearly half the planet…. Here is some fascinating history and questions about an integral part of our food system….
Earth is bathed in nitrogen. It makes up about 78% of the atmosphere, and it’s stitched into every nucleotide, every cell, every living thing on the planet. But before humans learned to synthesise ammonia using the Haber-Bosch process, nitrogen was a major constraint on the proliferation of life.
Nearly all nitrogen in the atmosphere comes in the form of N2, an inert molecule unsuitable for the chemistry that supports life. Living things need reactive nitrogen, which requires breaking the powerful triple bond holding dinitrogen’s two atoms together.
For the first few billion years of life on Earth, there were two ways to convert the oceans of inert N2 into life-sustaining reactive nitrogen: the massive, sudden heat of a lightning strike ripping through the atmosphere or microbes sucking in air and using an enzyme to slice dinitrogen’s triple bond.
In the early 20th century, the chemist Fritz Haber created a third way. He reacted N2 with hydrogen under intense heat and pressure in the presence of a catalyst to form ammonia. A few years after Haber patented his discovery, the BASF engineer Carl Bosch helped transform the laboratory experiment into an industrial operation.
The technique was labelled the Haber-Bosch process. The International Fertilizer Association reports that it was used to make roughly 150 million metric tons of ammonia in 2021.
Around the time of Haber’s discovery, scientists were warning that natural sources of reactive nitrogen, such as bird guano from Pacific islands or nitrogen salts found in South America’s deserts, would not provide enough fertiliser to feed the world’s growing population and that millions would starve without a new way to produce nitrogen.
Benjamin Houlton, an environmental scientist at Cornell University, argues that the Haber-Bosch process played a critical role in preventing this tragedy by massively increasing agricultural production. “Nitrogen is the key that unlocked the global food system,” he says.
In the 1930s, US farmers grew less than 1,500 kg of corn per hectare, according to data from the US Department of Agriculture. Since the start of this decade, they have produced an average of over 10,000 kg of corn per hectare. A 2008 study in Nature Geoscience estimates that without the Haber-Bosch process, about half the world’s population wouldn’t have enough food.
This influx of nitrogen has caused serious environmental problems. Fertiliser runoff pollutes drinking water and threatens species with extinction. Nitrogen gases released when fertiliser is applied cause air pollution, and the Haber-Bosch process itself is a major contributor to climate change, responsible for about 1% of all human-made carbon dioxide emissions.
Without the Haber-Bosch process, about half the world’s population wouldn’t have enough food.
Source: Nat. Geosci. 2008, DOI: 10.1038/ngeo325.
Note: Data after 2008 are estimates.
But Dan Blaustein-Rejto, director of food and agriculture at the Breakthrough Institute, a think tank focused on sustainability, points out that feeding the world without fertiliser would require much more land, which would mean removing forests and other ecosystems that store lots of carbon and reducing the amount of habitat available for wildlife.
Without nitrogen fertiliser, agriculture’s environmental footprint could very well be larger, he says. “Despite its poor environmental reputation, nitrogen fertiliser has actually been key to limiting agriculture’s land footprint.”
Houlton agrees that the Haber-Bosch process has delivered enormous benefits but says the costs are starting to add up and shouldn’t be ignored, especially as the world’s appetite for nitrogen continues to rise. “The positives are almost infinite in some ways,” he says. “But those negatives can come back to disrupt society as we know it, and I think it’s happening.”
Policies that limit nitrogen pollution and innovations that make fertiliser use more efficient could help capture the benefits while minimising environmental damage, Houlton says. And those solutions need to be deployed more quickly.
Fertiliser’s future
Given the negative environmental impacts of making and using synthetic nitrogen fertiliser, many companies and researchers are looking for alternatives to the Haber-Bosch process. Here are a few options…..