| Literature DB >> 31583616 |
Torbjörn Jansson1, Hans Estrup Andersen2, Berit Hasler3, Lisa Höglind4, Bo G Gustafsson5,6.
Abstract
In this study, quantitative models of the agricultural sector and nutrient transport and cycling are used to analyse the impacts in the Baltic Sea of replacing the current Greening measures of the EU's Common Agricultural Policy with a package of investments in manure handling. The investments aim at improving nutrient utilization and reducing nitrogen leaching, based on the assumption that lagging farms and regions can catch up with observed good practice. Our results indicate that such investments could reduce nitrogen surpluses in agriculture by 18% and nitrogen concentrations in the Baltic Sea by 1 to 9% depending on the basin. The Greening measures, in contrast, are found to actually increase nitrogen leaching.Entities:
Keywords: Baltic Sea; Common agricultural policy; Eutrophication; Modelling; Nitrogen
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31583616 PMCID: PMC6814651 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01251-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Model chain translating changes in policy and technology to impacts on nitrogen in the Baltic Sea
Fig. 3Nitrogen leaching from the rootzone for each HSMU, all land uses combined, Reference scenario. The map also shows the non-EU countries in the Baltic Sea drainage basin
Scenarios analysed and the associated changes to policies and technologies
| Scenario name | CAP payments | Manure storage | Fertilization technology | Manure composition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Current policies continued up to 2030 | As observed 2017 | As observed 2017 | As observed 2017 |
| No greening | Greening restrictions and payments removed | As “reference” | As “reference” | As “reference” |
| Manure investments | Greening restrictions and payments removed | All manure is stored in facilities with > 9 m capacity | All liquid manure is spread using hoses and injection | Share of liquid increased to ≥ 0.75 |
Fertilizer value for types of manure, technologies of application and timing of application (percent, relative to mineral fertilizer)
| Manure type (k) | Application technology (i) | Timing of application (t) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spring | Summer/fall | Winter | ||
| Solid | broad spr. | 40 | 25 | 35 |
| Solid | Injection | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Solid | Hoses | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Liquid | broad spr. | 45 | 25 | 30 |
| Liquid | Injection | 65 | 60 | 30 |
| Liquid | Hoses | 55 | 45 | 30 |
Decomposition of impacts on UAA and N-surplus, total for the eight Baltic countries, and for all three scenarios
| Agricultural area | Total | Surplus per ha | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1000 ha) | (1000 t) | (kg/ha) | |
| Reference | 47,426 | 3005 | 63.4 |
| No greening | 46,244 | 2981 | 64.5 |
| diff. to | (− 1182) | (− 25) | (1.1) |
| All improvements | 46373 | 2438 | 52.6 |
| diff. to | (129) | (− 543) | (− 11.9) |
| Partial technology implementations, diff. to | |||
| Only improved storage | (30) | (− 137) | (− 3.0) |
| Only improved application | (44) | (− 197) | (− 4.3) |
| Only liquid system | (19) | (− 60) | (− 1.3) |
| Improved storage and application | (69) | (− 319) | (− 7.0) |
| Improved storage and liquid system | (56) | (− 229) | (− 5.0) |
| Improved application and liquid system | (101) | (− 407) | (− 8.9) |
Numbers in brackets are differences to Reference and No greening as indicated
Source own computations
Fig. 2Manure fertilizer value of N in the different scenarios (relative to mineral N)
Summary of nitrogen budgets at the field (outputs of CAPRI) in the Manure investment scenario, aggregated from NUTS2 to countries
| Source (+) or sink (−) | Denmark | Germany | Finland | Sweden | Estonia | Lithuania | Latvia | Poland |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| + Mineral fertilizers | 160 | 1449 | 120 | 134 | 44 | 184 | 57 | 1125 |
| (− 6) | (− 243) | (− 21) | (− 41) | (− 7) | (− 38) | (− 37) | (− 175) | |
| + Manurea | 250 | 1076 | 73 | 118 | 21 | 63 | 36 | 446 |
| (0) | (1) | (0) | (0) | (0) | (1) | (1) | (1) | |
| + Crop residues | 151 | 1460 | 107 | 227 | 60 | 201 | 174 | 723 |
| (− 1) | (− 18) | (1) | (− 3) | (1) | (6) | (17) | (− 7) | |
| + N fixation | 37 | 175 | 7 | 36 | 12 | 48 | 28 | 76 |
| (0) | (− 7) | (0) | (0) | (0) | (2) | (6) | (− 1) | |
| + Atm. deposition | 48 | 177 | 13 | 33 | 9 | 29 | 20 | 162 |
| (− 1) | (− 4) | (− 1) | (− 1) | (0) | (0) | (0) | (− 5) | |
| − Uptake by cropsb | 428 | 3401 | 239 | 406 | 95 | 382 | 253 | 1731 |
| (− 2) | (− 23) | (− 2) | (− 10) | (0) | (5) | (10) | (10) | |
| = Total Surplus | 218 | 936 | 80 | 143 | 52 | 143 | 63 | 801 |
| (− 7) | (− 248) | (− 18) | (− 36) | (− 6) | (− 33) | (− 23) | (− 197) |
All values are in 1000 tonnes N, numbers in brackets are differences to Reference
aNet of losses in handling and storage
b“Uptake by crops” contains nutrients that become “Crop residues” on the source side of the computation. This way of defining crop residues is convenient because rotation of crops cause crop residues from one crop to benefit another
Source Own computations and simulations with CAPRI
Fig. 4Nitrogen leaching in the scenarios (kg N/ha/year)
Fig. 5Relative change in N loading to the Baltic Sea for the Manure investments scenario relative to the reference. Data aggregated to 117 sub-basins
Fig. 6Changes between Reference and Manure investments scenarios (%) of total N loads per basin versus the resulting changes winter DIN concentration in the Baltic Sea basins