Environmental Management: Principles and practice
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
Chemical fertilizers
Once agriculture relied on livestock and human manure, compost, bonemeal, dried blood, green manures, marl, agricultural lime and crop rotation. Work in the UK by Lawes, Gilbert and others, and in Germany by Von Liebig, led by the 1840s to the development of superphosphate artificial fertilizer. Between 1885 and 1985 the UK, one of the earliest countries to adopt artificial fertilizer widely, increased applications 25-fold (Briggs and Courtney, 1985:34, 101). After 1945 combined nitrogen- potassium-phosphate (NPK) fertilizer use in the UK increased considerably. The same period also saw changing agricultural practices, leading to reduced use of animal manure and agricultural lime, more mechanization and less input of manual labour. In the 1930s UK agriculture could not feed the population; between 1952 and 1972 UK agricultural output rose by about 60 per cent and now feeds a much larger population, largely thanks to artificial fertilizers, although changes in the crops grown make it difficult to assess how much. On a world scale, fertilizers, particularly N-fertilizers, have played a key role in increasing crop production (Pinstrup-Andersen, 1982:148). Because of the diversity of factors involved, it is difficult to be sure how much is attributable to improved crops. In 1950 the world used about 14 million tonnes of N-fertilizer; by 1985 this had risen to about 125 million tonnes (Saull, 1990). In the late 1970s on average the developing countries used 28 kg ha –1 and the developed countries 107 kg ha–1. Most of the fertilizer used in developing countries is for large-scale grain and export crop production. Boserüp (1990:40) noted that in 1970 80 per cent of India’s chemical fertilizer was used by only 15 per cent of districts; it is therefore probably reasonable to say that most developing country farmers use little or no chemical fertilizer. Japan’s success in modernizing its agriculture and the roughly one-third increase in food production in China between 1970 and 1985 are attributed largely to fertilizer use (Allen, 1977; Wolf, 1986:12). The world’s food and commodity production is clearly dependent on chemical fertilizers, and their use is likely to increase, but unfortunately they can be a serious source of pollution. In addition, there are uncertainties about the long-term impact of chemical fertilizers on farmland. There is some indication that where year-round use of monocrops and fertilizer has replaced crop rotation and use of livestock manure, fertility problems arise, in particular a net loss of organic matter from the soil, and in some areas zinc or sulphur deficiency. Some countries have moved away from mixed agriculture for commercial reasons so that arable and livestock farming are no longer integrated—the former must rely on chemicals and the latter have an animal waste disposal problem. The costs of disposing of agriculture waste may one day bring agriculture full circle, to recycling livestock manure and crop residue, possibly together with domestic refuse CHAPTER ELEVEN 226 and human sewage. But to do so will require composting facilities and distribution. An alternative is to incinerate these wastes and recover electricity and district heating (as in Denmark). Artificial fertilizers offer the following advantages over organic fertilizers: ♦ They can be easier to store, handle, apply and transport than most natural fertilizers in use at present. ♦ There is less smell, lower risk of pathogenic contamination (although well- composted organic material is virtually pasteurized). ♦ Land spread with manure cannot be properly grazed for some time due to the risk of disease transmission and because cattle dislike unclean pasture. Artificial fertilizers allow intensive use of grazing land more rapidly after treatment. If they are not applied with caution, artificial fertilizers cause contamination (fertilizers are contaminants rather than pollutants) and fail to give their full potential (Mellanby, 1970; Gunn and Stevens, 1976). Both organic manures and artificial fertilizers can cause eutrophication of water bodies and increased nitrates in groundwater. Phosphates have been accumulating in soils, river and lake sediments for decades, as a consequence of the use of phosphatic fertilizers, spreading of livestock manure, disposal of sewage and leaching of poorly sealed landfill sites. This poses a threat, particularly in Europe and North America. Studies in Europe suggest that, even if application of phosphates is controlled, steady leaching and possibly more rapid mobilization if there is soil acidification or global warming will lead to a six- to ten-fold increase in river and groundwater contamination. Such levels would raise problems for domestic water supply and for the ecology of rivers, lakes, the Baltic, the North Sea and other seas (Behrendt and Boekhold, 1993). Excessive levels of nitrates (NO 3 ) in groundwater and surface water are increasingly a problem in Europe, the USA and other parts of the world. The indications are that it is N-fertilizers which are responsible for a good deal of contamination, which may also be caused by more deep ploughing, use of detergents, sewage pollution, conversion of pasture to arable or land drainage. In parts of the USA irrigation using N-fertilizers seems to be a major cause of groundwater nitrates. In the UK borehole studies suggest correlations between conversion of pasture to arable with N-fertilizer use and high groundwater nitrate levels (Conway and Pretty, 1991:186). In 1991 between 30 per cent and 35 per cent of the UK population depended on groundwater, which in some areas is increasingly contaminated. There are ways of controlling nitrate fertilizer use: reduction of price supports for crops; regulation of crops grown; quotas or permits which seek to limit expansion of an activity; set-aside—the withdrawal of land from production; taxation of nitrate fertilizers (Clunies-Ross, 1993). Even if such controls were adopted, improvement would come slowly because nitrates may take up to 50 years to reach groundwater, depending on the geology (Hornsby, 1989). Conversion of farmland to some other use could, because agricultural liming ceases, lead to increasing soil pH and greater releases of nitrates, phosphates and heavy metals. Costly slow-release liming treatment POLLUTION AND WASTE MANAGEMENT 227 may be needed. In temperate environments, planting winter wheat with white clover might help to reduce nitrate leaching, and would cut costs of fertilizer inputs and discourage pests. Authorities will be forced to treat domestic water to remove nitrates, blend contaminated and pure supplies or store water in surface reservoirs for long enough to reduce nitrate content. Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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