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  2. Crop Science A5
  3. ICAR-Indian Institute of Rice Research G7
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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/66941
Title: The Indian nitrogen challenge in a global perspective. Book Chapter- The Indian Nitrogen Assessment.
Authors: iii. Mark A. Sutton, Julia Drewer, Andrea Moring1, Tapan Adhya, Altaf Ahmed, Arti Bhatia, Will Brownlie, Ulrike Dragosits, Sachin D. Ghude, Jon Hillier,Sunila Hooda, Clare M. Howard, Niveta Jain, Dinesh Kumar, R.M. Kumar, Dali R. Nayak, C.N. Neeraja, Radha Prasana, Adam Price, B. Ramakrishnan, David Reay, Renu Singh, Ute Skiba, Jo U. Smith, Saran Sohi, D. Subrahmanyan, Hans van Grinsven, Massimo Vieno, S.R. Voleti, Himanshu Pathak, N. Raghuram
ICAR Data Use Licennce: http://krishi.icar.gov.in/PDF/ICAR_Data_Use_Licence.pdf
Author's Affiliated institute: ICAR-IIRR
Published/ Complete Date: 2017-08-01
Keywords: Rice, NUE
Publisher: ELSEVIER
Citation: Mark A. Sutton, Julia Drewer, Andrea Moring1, Tapan Adhya, Altaf Ahmed, Arti Bhatia, Will Brownlie, Ulrike Dragosits, Sachin D. Ghude, Jon Hillier,Sunila Hooda, Clare M. Howard, Niveta Jain, Dinesh Kumar, R.M. Kumar, Dali R. Nayak, C.N. Neeraja, Radha Prasana, Adam Price, B. Ramakrishnan, David Reay, Renu Singh, Ute Skiba, Jo U. Smith, Saran Sohi, D. Subrahmanyan, Hans van Grinsven, Massimo Vieno, S.R. Voleti, Himanshu Pathak, N. Raghuram. The Indian nitrogen challenge in a global perspective. Book Chapter- The Indian Nitrogen Assessment.
Series/Report no.: Not Available;
Abstract/Description: Human activities have massively altered the global nitrogen (N) cycle, doubling annual production of reactive N (Nr) compounds from atmospheric dinitrogen (N2). The use of 120 Mt year⁻¹ fertilizer N, with a global terrestrial/atmospheric N fixation of 285Mtyear⁻¹, has provided huge benefits for global food production. However, nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) of the world food system is only -15%. The lost Nr creates a cascade of air and water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, until it is eventually denitrified back to N2.India clearly illustrates a dual N challenge for food and environment, consuming 17Mt of N fertilizer annually (14% of the global total), which has increased since 1970 at 6% year⁻¹ approximately. Emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) from combustion sources are also increasing rapidly at 6.5% year⁻¹ currently. By comparison, population growth rate is lower (2% year⁻¹), while ammonia (NH3) emission increase is even less (1%), pertaining to smaller changes in livestock numbers. At current rate, Indian NOx emissions will exceed NH3 emissions by 2055. India currently loses Nr worth US$10billionyear⁻¹ as fertilizer value, while costs of Nr to health, ecosystems, and climate are estimated at US$75 (38-151) billion year⁻¹.Only a small fraction of the Indian population consumes animal products, hence per capita Nr use and pollution is much less than in many developed countries. However, rates of meat consumption are increasing. While published projections from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization anticipate a doubling of South Asian fertilizer consumption from 2006 to 2050 (equivalent to 1.9% year⁻¹ increase), these projections lack transparency and require reevaluation. In practice, the future nitrogen cycle for India will depend on scientific advances in agronomy, genetics and environment, and the extent to which government and society grasp the emerging opportunities for optimizing N management.
Description: Not Available
ISSN: Not Available
Type(s) of content: Book chapter
Sponsors: Not Available
Language: English
Source, DOI or any other URL: DOI: 10.1016/B978-0-12-811836-8.00002-1
URI: http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/66941
Appears in Collections:CS-IIRR-Publication

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