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Researchers Review Technical Solutions for Safe Utilization of Heavy Metal-polluted Farmland in China

Jun 24, 2019

Soilborne food heavy metal pollution is now a threat to local people through food consumption in many parts of the world, particularly in developing countries like China.
In the past decades, different strategies have been explored to address the farmland heavy metal problem such as metal removal, substitute planting and safe farming. Safe farming was intended to address the soil-borne food heavy metal issue and has been advocated as a priority solution. Many conventional and novel technologies have been tested for safe farming.
In a study published in Land Degradation & Development, Dr. LI Xiaofang from the Centre for Agricultural Resources Research, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences proposed two criteria for evaluating candidate technologies, particularly the metal immobilizers to formulate a responsible technical scheme.
While most reduced heavy metals in grains, none of the technologies alone were found to be sufficient in field practice to meet national food standards. The current best practice is recognized as the combination of several agronomic measures, including pollution-safe cultivars, optimal water management, liming and conventional metal immobilizers.

A unified conceptual framework is helpful for the concerted efforts of restorationists to address farmland heavy metal pollution in China and other countries.

Dr. LI suggested that any remediation measures must respect the nature of the soil. To soil scientists, soil is a viable entity with a long history of biogeochemical weathering. Mineral ameliorants require careful and systematic evaluation before their large-scale promotion. It is not recommended to apply any chemicals to permanently change the constitution of arable soil.

Besides, he held that any technical solutions should respect the interests of farmers. Unlike ecological restoration of natural ecosystems, safe farming per se is the safe utilization of land resources that denies long-term economic input.

As far as it goes, both theoretical synthesis and large-scale field trials are required for a path towards a unified set of approaches that are accessible and feasible internationally and could be applied by governmental agencies.

Contact

LI Xiaofang

Centre for Agricultural Resources Research

E-mail:

Technical solutions for the safe utilization of heavy metal‐contaminated farmland in China: A critical review

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