AI Article Synopsis

  • Nitrogen management is crucial for balancing energy and food production with the risks of environmental pollution caused by excess reactive nitrogen (N).
  • The N footprint measures the amount of reactive N losses associated with food and energy production, showing significant variability across countries (15 to 47 kg N per person per year) mainly due to differences in protein consumption and food production waste.
  • Strategies to reduce the N footprint include enhancing N use efficiency, recycling, minimizing food waste, and altering dietary choices, while there are still knowledge gaps regarding its impact from non-food goods and soil processes.

Article Abstract

Nitrogen (N) management presents a sustainability dilemma: N is strongly linked to energy and food production, but excess reactive N causes environmental pollution. The N footprint is an indicator that quantifies reactive N losses to the environment from consumption and production of food and the use of energy. The average per capita N footprint (calculated using the N-Calculator methodology) of ten countries varies from 15 to 47 kg N capita year. The major cause of the difference is the protein consumption rates and food production N losses. The food sector dominates all countries' N footprints. Global connections via trade significantly affect the N footprint in countries that rely on imported foods and feeds. The authors present N footprint reduction strategies (e.g., improve N use efficiency, increase N recycling, reduce food waste, shift dietary choices) and identify knowledge gaps (e.g., the N footprint from nonfood goods and soil N process).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5274619PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13280-016-0815-4DOI Listing

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