Eutrophication is a big word, and it represents a big problem. It occurs when rivers and lakes reach an overabundance of nutrients – most often from agricultural and water treatment practices. This overabundance of nutrients increases algae growth, setting off an ecosystem chain reaction that can have consequences for all plant and animal life.
To prevent eutrophication of freshwater systems, wastewater treatment plants must remove phosphorus from treated water. But phosphorus is a finite resource for which there is no known substitute. In fact, the United Nations predicts global demand for phosphorus will rise 70 percent by 2050.
So instead of removing it, why not extract and reuse it?