4.5 Article

The nitrogen footprint of food products in the European Union

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
Volume 152, Issue -, Pages S20-S33

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0021859613000786

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Funding

  1. European Commission [FP7-266018]
  2. UNECE Task Force on Reactive Nitrogen from the Dutch Ministry [WOT-04-008-010]

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Nitrogen (N) is an essential element for plants and animals. Due to large inputs of mineral fertilizer, crop yields and livestock production in Europe have increased markedly over the last century, but as a consequence losses of reactive Nto air, soil and water have intensified as well. Two different models (CAPRI and MITERRA) were used to quantify the N flows in agriculture in the European Union (EU27), at country-level and for EU27 agriculture as a whole, differentiated into 12 main food categories. The results showed that the N footprint, defined as the totalNlosses to the environment per unit of product, varies widely between different food categories, with substantially higher values for livestock products and the highest values for beef (c. 500 gN/kg beef), as compared to vegetable products. The lowest N footprint of c. 2 gN/kg product was calculated for sugar beet, fruits and vegetables, and potatoes. The losses of reactive N were dominated by N leaching and run-off, and ammonia volatilization, with 0.83 and 0.88 due to consumption of livestock products. The N investment factors, defined as the quantity of new reactive N required to produce one unit of N in the product varied between 1.2 kg N/kg N in product for pulses to 15-20 kg N for beef.

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