Greenhouse gas emissions and mitigation potential from fertilizer manufacture and application in India

被引:25
作者
Tirado, Reyes [1 ]
Gopikrishna, S. R. [2 ]
Krishnan, Rajesh [2 ]
Smith, Pete [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Exeter, Sch Biosci, Greenpeace Res Labs, Innovat Ctr Phase 2, Exeter EX4 4RN, Devon, England
[2] Greenpeace India, Bangalore 560025, Karnataka, India
[3] Univ Aberdeen, Sch Biol Sci, Inst Biol & Environm Sci, Aberdeen AB24 3UU, Scotland
关键词
climate change mitigation potential; ecological farming; greenhouse gas emissions; nitrous oxide; synthetic nitrogen fertilizer; NITROUS-OXIDE EMISSIONS; AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS; DNDC MODEL; RICE; METHANE; SOIL; MANAGEMENT; INVENTORY; WHEAT; EFFICIENCY;
D O I
10.3763/ijas.2009.0422
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Synthetic nitrogen (N) fertilizers, by both very energy-intensive manufacture and inefficient N use in farm soils, contribute rationally to emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and, thus, climate change. India consumes similar to 14Mt of synthetic N per year, of which about 80 per cent is produced, and is the second-largest producer and consumer in the world, after China. We estimate that GHG emissions from synthetic N fertilizer in India reached similar to 100Mt of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-e) in 2006/2007; about half of these emissions resulted from the 11 Mt of synthetic N produced in the country that year (48Mt of CO2-e) and the other half resulted from the 14Mt of N applied to Indian farm soils in the same year (51 Mt of CO2-e, ranging between 28 and 1 63Mt of CO2-e). Emissions from synthetic N fertilizers represent 6 per cent of India's total anthropogenic emissions, comparable to cement industry and to the whole road transport system. There is significant potential to mitigate these emissions: savings from increased N use efficiency and from shifting away from synthetic fertilizer could reduce total fertilizers emissions to 37Mt of CO2-e, and the contribution of fertilizers to India's emissions would drop from 6 to 2 per cent.
引用
收藏
页码:176 / 185
页数:10
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