The role of nitrogen in world food production and environmental sustainability

Publication

In this paper the environmental consequences of FAO's agricultural projection until 2030 are shown. The FAO projection is focussed on agricultural production and trade in order to meet the Millennium Development Goal of eradication of hunger in 2015. However, the environmental carrying capacity of such an increase in agricultural production is hardly discussed. Here, we have used the IMAGE model to focus on land-use results and nutrient loading as a consequence of the FAO projection. Both the increase in use of arable land and emissions of reactive nitrogen from intensive agricultural systems pose an increasing pressure on ecosystems which should also be considered as one of the Millennium Development Goals.

Abstract

On the basis of the FAO projection ‘World Agriculture: Towards 2015/2030’ we direct our discussion to food production, the consequences for land use, efficiency of nitrogen (N) and losses of reactive N to the environment during 1995–2030. According the FAO, global food production can keep pace with the increase in food demand in the coming three decades. However, according the projection used here, there will be a major global increase (8%) in arable land, most of it in developing countries and with a major impact on the extent of tropical forests. Further forest clearing may occur to compensate for declining soil productivity due to land degradation. Despite improvements in the N use efficiency, total reactive N loss will grow strongly in the world’s increasingly intensive agricultural systems. In the 1995–2030 period emissions of reactive N from intensive agricultural systems will continue to rise, particularly in developing countries. Therefore, the increase of N use efficiency and further improvement of agronomic management must remain high on the priority list of policy makers.

Authors

Eickhout B , Bouwman A F , van Zeijts H

Specifications

Publication title
The role of nitrogen in world food production and environmental sustainability
Publication date
18 April 2006
Publication type
Publication
Magazine
Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 116: 4-14.
Product number
91711