Assessing the benefits and wider costs of different N fertilisers for grassland agriculture
Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science 65(5): 625-639
Article 2018 English
Authors
AC
Alison Carswell
RS
Rory Shaw
JH
John W. Hunt
Abstract
1 min read
Fertiliser nitrogen (N) is essential for maintaining agronomic outputs for our growing population. However, the societal, economic and environmental impacts of excess reactive N from fertiliser is rarely assessed. Here the agronomic, economic and environmental efficacy of three N-fertiliser sources, ammonium-nitrate (AN), urea (U), and inhibited-urea (IU; with NPBT) were evaluated at two grassland sites. Dry matter yield and herbage quality were measured at each silage-cut. Additionally, NH3-N and N2O-N losses were measured and used to calculate the effective N source cost and externality costs, which account for associated environmental and societal impacts. We found no effect of different N sources on yield or herbage quality. However, NH3-N emissions were significantly reduced under the IU treatment, by 48–65%. No significant differences in cumulative N2O emissions were observed. Incorporating externality costs increased fertiliser prices by 1.23–2.36, 6.51–16.4, and 3.17–4.17 times the original cost, for AN, U and IU, respectively, transforming U from the cheapest, to the most expensive of the N sources examined. However, with no apparent yield differences between N-fertiliser sources there is no economic incentive for the land-manager to use the more environmentally and socially acceptable option, unless externality costs are incorporated into fertiliser prices at the point of sale.
Alison Carswell, Antonio Rafael Sánchez‐Rodríguez, Karen Saunders, Kate Le Cocq, Rory Shaw, Joseph Cotton, Yushu Zhang, Jess Evans, D. R. Chadwick, Davey L Jones, T. H. Misselbrook
Yue Qian, Alicia Ledo, Kun Cheng, Fabrizio Albanito, Ulrike Lebender, Tek B. Sapkota, Frank Brentrup, Clare M. Stirling, Pete Smith, Jianfei Sun, Genxing Pan, Jonathan Hillier
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.