Mineral Fertilizer Use and the Environment International Fertilizer Industry Association United Nations Environment Programme
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3.1.3. Fertilizers and food The exact contribution of mineral fertilizers to agricultural production is debatable but in any case the millions of field trials which have been carried out throughout the world demonstrate clearly their great influence on crop yields. In an article in “The Observer”, New Delhi, April 17, 1997, Dr. Swaminathan, a leading Indian scientist, is reported as saying that Fertilizer is the key to securing the food need of more than 1.3 billion Indians by the year 2025. No country has been able to increase agricultural productivity without expanding the use of chemical fertilizers. Working on a conservative population forecast of 1.3 billion by 2025, India would need 30 to 35 million tonnes of NPK from chemical fertilizers in addition to 10 million tonnes from organic and biofertilizer sources, to produce the minimum food grain need of 300 million tonnes. Scientists have found that there was growing evidence of the increasing deficiency of phosphate and potash in soils, aggravated by the disproportionate application of higher doses of N in relation to P and K. Sulphur has been identified as crucial for optimizing the yield from oilseeds, pulses, legumes and high-yielding cereals. N. E. Borlaug, a Nobel Prize winner, (1997), speaking of Africa, stated: “My 53 years of experience in low-income developing countries tells me that small-scale farmers are loath to adopt such “low-input, low-output” technologies since they tend to perpetuate human drudgery and the risk of hunger. This certainly has been our experience in Sasakawa- Global 2000, where farmers have overwhelmingly told us they want access to yield- increasing, drudgery-reducing technology, and have proven that they are able and enthusiastically willing to modernize their production”. Several institutions, among them the FAO, IFPRI, UNDP, the US Department of Agriculture and the World Bank, have made projections concerning food security. They differ according to the assumptions made, but essentially they are in agreement that the world supply of food will have to keep growing, and growing rapidly. Agricultural investment, especially in research and advisory services, will be essential if the objective is to be achieved. |
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