Cornell University researchers have unveiled a groundbreaking study highlighting how nutrients from animal manure and human waste could dramatically cut America's reliance on synthetic fertilizers. Published in Nature Sustainability on April 15, 2026, the research maps out a path toward a more sustainable agricultural future by tapping into waste streams that are currently underutilized.
Synthetic fertilizers, primarily nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), are essential for feeding the nation but come with significant drawbacks. Their production is energy-intensive, contributing to greenhouse gas emissions, and overuse leads to nutrient runoff that pollutes waterways, creating dead zones like those in the Gulf of Mexico. Recent global disruptions, such as supply chain issues exacerbated by geopolitical tensions including the Iran conflict, have driven up costs and highlighted vulnerabilities. The Cornell team, led by Assistant Professor Chuan Liao from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS), argues that shifting to recovered nutrients from waste offers a viable alternative.
Unpacking the Cornell Study's Methodology and Scope
The study employs high-resolution mapping at a 10-kilometer grid across the continental U.S., integrating public data on human wastewater, livestock manure production, and nutrient demands for 15 major crops including corn, soybeans, wheat, and cotton. First author Shuai Zhou, now at the University of South Alabama, along with co-authors Rebecca Nelson, Johannes Lehmann, and others from Cornell's School of Integrative Plant Science (SIPS), calculated potential recovery rates.
Currently, only about 5% of nitrogen from manure and 13% from human waste is recovered for agricultural use. By modeling improved technologies like anaerobic digestion, struvite precipitation, and composting, the researchers show waste could supply 102% of the nitrogen and 50% of the phosphorus required nationally. Locally, 37% of nitrogen and 46% of phosphorus needs could be met without transport, with surpluses from livestock-heavy states like Iowa and California redistributable to deficits in the Midwest at low cost.

The Economic Windfall: $5.7 Billion in Hidden Value
At current market prices, the recoverable nutrients represent over $5.7 billion annually – a boon for farmers facing volatile fertilizer costs that spiked during recent global events. "This is a coordination problem, not a resource problem," Liao emphasized, pointing to the untapped potential in everyday waste streams.
For context, U.S. agriculture applies roughly 12 million metric tons of nitrogen and 4.5 million tons of phosphorus yearly, much imported. Recycling could stabilize supply, reduce import dependence (over 80% of nitrogen from abroad), and lower emissions from Haber-Bosch synthesis, which consumes 1-2% of global energy.
Proven Technologies for Nutrient Extraction
- Anaerobic Digestion: Breaks down manure in oxygen-free tanks, yielding biogas for energy and digestate rich in plant-available nutrients. Adopted on over 2,500 U.S. farms, recovering 20-50% N.
- Struvite Precipitation: Harvests magnesium ammonium phosphate crystals from wastewater, a slow-release fertilizer. Commercialized by companies like Ostara, with plants in 10 states.
- Composting and Pyrolysis: Stabilizes biosolids into pathogen-free products; pyrolysis produces biochar-fertilizers enhancing soil carbon sequestration.
- Electrolysis and Membrane Filtration: Emerging for phosphorus stripping from wastewater, achieving 90% recovery rates in pilots.
These methods, refined at universities like Cornell's Waste Management Institute, address variability in waste composition while minimizing odors and pathogens.
Navigating Barriers: Logistics, Regulations, and Perceptions
While promising, hurdles remain. Nutrient surpluses cluster in urban Northeast and Western livestock belts, mismatched with Midwest croplands. Transport costs could rise for long hauls, though the study shows over half of surpluses movable economically within states.
EPA's Part 503 Rule governs biosolids (treated human waste), classifying them as Class A (safe for food crops) or B. Benefits include improved soil structure and microbial activity, but risks like PFAS accumulation and heavy metals necessitate monitoring. Only 50% of U.S. wastewater plants produce exceptional quality biosolids due to infrastructure gaps.
Farmer education combats 'yuck factor,' while incentives like nutrient credits in trading programs could accelerate adoption.
Photo by Rianne Zuur on Unsplash
Case Studies Spotlighting Success
In Pennsylvania's Lancaster County, Dutch manure digesters process dairy waste into fertilizer pellets, powering 1,000 homes and replacing 20,000 tons of synthetics yearly. Michigan's Ostara Pearl plant recovers struvite from Detroit wastewater, supplying crops and saving $500K in chemicals annually.
California's Central Valley pilots blend biosolids with compost for almond orchards, boosting yields 15% while cutting irrigation needs. These align with USDA's manureshed approach, matching waste supply to crop demand regionally.
| Project | Location | Nutrients Recovered (tons/year) | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lancaster Digesters | PA | 5,000 N | Energy + Fertilizer |
| Ostara Pearl | MI | 500 P | Cost Savings |
| Central Valley Biosolids | CA | 10,000 mixed | Yield Boost |
Broader Impacts: Environment, Equity, and Climate
Beyond farms, this shift curbs eutrophication – excess nutrients fueling algal blooms – and slashes ammonia emissions from manure storage (25% of U.S. total). It advances environmental justice: nutrient-poor areas often correlate with low-income counties facing synthetic overuse pollution.
Climate-wise, avoided synthetic production cuts 10-20 million tons CO2-equivalent yearly, per lifecycle analyses. Liao notes: "Fixing nutrient flow can promote environmental justice."
Cornell's Pioneering Role in Soil Sustainability
Cornell CALS leads with the Nutrient Management Spear Program (NMSP) and Waste Management Institute, developing tools like the ManureNet calculator. Lehmann's pyrolysis research turns waste into stable biochars, while Nelson's plant pathology expertise ensures safe application. This study exemplifies interdisciplinary collaboration at SIPS, fostering PhD training in circular bioeconomy.

Pathways Forward: Policy and Innovation Needs
Recommendations include federal grants for recovery infrastructure ($1-2B initial investment recouped in years), state-level manureshed plans, and tax credits mirroring renewable energy. Universities like Cornell advocate integrating into Farm Bill revisions, partnering with EPA for PFAS-safe standards.
Careers in Sustainable Nutrient Management
This field booms for soil scientists, ag engineers, and waste specialists. Roles at land-grants like Cornell involve modeling, tech piloting, policy advising – with salaries averaging $90K-$120K. Explore research assistantships or faculty positions advancing circular ag.EPA's biosolids resources guide safe practices.
Photo by Greg Bollella on Unsplash
A Greener Harvest Ahead
The Cornell breakthrough signals a tipping point: from waste as problem to asset. With tech ready and economics favorable, coordinated action could transform U.S. farming by 2030, bolstering food security amid climate pressures. As Liao urges, decentralized systems promise resilience and equity for generations.







