
This book looks at key developments in the supply of fertilizers, overseas and in Australia, in sustaining the world's population. Other uses that are made of chemicals used as fertilizers are discussed, as well as some of the environmental impacts of fertilizer manufacture and use.
Less than two hundred years ago, naturally occurring ores and organic plant and animal wastes were used as fertilizer. There was not enough of these products to meet demand. People were malnourished.
The first chemically altered phosphorus (P) fertilizer to be used was single superphosphate (SSP). In Australia, superphosphate was first used in wheat grown in rotation with legume-based pastures. From the late 1960s high analysis ammonium phosphate fertilizers replaced superphosphate in cropping. Superphosphate continued to be used on pasture.
The first nitrogen (N) fertilizer to be used in Australia was byproduct ammonium sulfate from gasworks and the steel industry. Ammonium sulfate was later synthesized by reacting ammonia produced through the Haber Bosch process with sulfuric acid. The Haber Bosch process is regarded as one of the most, if not the most important technological development of the 20th century. In the 1970s urea overtook ammonium sulfate as the most popular nitrogen fertilizer.
In 1850, there were 1.25 billion people on earth. In 2025, that number exceeded eight billion. Australia's population is 27.5 million. About three-quarters of Australia's rural produce is exported. The nation feeds and clothes a population of around 100 million. This would not be possible without advances in chemical engineering and agricultural science.
This is the first published history of the Australian fertilizer industry.
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