New study outlines options to incentivize farmers to use less nitrogen
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[June 25, 2022]
By Zeta Cross | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Illinois is one of 11
states that have committed to reduce nutrient loads used in agriculture
that are affecting the Mississippi River.
Excess nitrogen runoff from Illinois corn farms is killing fish in the
Gulf of Mexico. Scientists have been monitoring the effect of nitrogen
on the Mississippi River and in the Gulf of Mexico since the 1990s.
Algae blooms from nitrogen have created a dead zone the size of Rhode
Island that is so oxygen-deprived that fish and aquatic life cannot
survive.
Researchers say that 67% of corn growers use more nitrogen than they
need on their crops.
Doctoral graduate German Mandrini, who studied remedies for nitrogen
runoff from Illinois farms when he was at the University of Illinois,
told The Center Square that Illinois is particularly important because
“agriculture is one of the main sectors that provides nitrogen to the
Mississippi.”
“When you put too much, more than what the crops use, then the nitrogen
stays in the soil,” Mandrini said. “It eventually starts to move from
agricultural soil, to ground water to fresh water and it slowly goes to
the Mississippi River and down to the Gulf of Mexico.”
One promising path is the more accurate application of nitrogen so that
less of the fertilizer leaches into the soil after the crop is
harvested. When corn is harvested, much of the nitrogen used to
fertilize the crop is removed with the crop. If farmers do not apply so
much excess nitrogen, less of the fertilizer will remain behind when the
crop is harvested.
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By incentivizing farmers to use cover crops and other strategies,
Illinois had hoped to reduce excess nitrogen runoff by 15% by the end of
this year. But the fertilizer impact has only worsened.
Scientists at the University of Illinois have just published a new study
that outlines four different policy options that could incentivize
farmers to use less nitrogen and contain more excess runoff on their
farms, instead of allowing it to leach into groundwater and make its way
to the Mississippi.
Nicolas Martin, assistant professor in the Department of Crop Sciences
at the University of Illinois, is co-author of the study. He said the
goal was to start a discussion by providing policy options – not to come
up with definitive solutions.
The proposed policies range from imposing a tax on nitrogen, charging
farmers a fee for excess nitrogen usage, nitrogen removal at harvest
from nitrogen applied as fertilizer and charging a fee for it and,
finally, a voluntary nitrogen reduction program.
Mandrini said reducing the leaching of excess nitrogen while making sure
that farmers can maximize their profits was the aim of the study.
“It is a complex problem,” Mandrini said. “Farmers want to do the right
thing as long as they can protect their profits.”
Conserving more nitrogen on farms can be costly. The researchers are
interested in designing incentives that will compensate farmers for
their efforts. |