Redistribution of nitrogen to feed the people on a safer planet

Author:

Kahiluoto Helena12ORCID,Sakieh Yousef1ORCID,Kaseva Janne3ORCID,Kersebaum Kurt-Christian456ORCID,Minoli Sara7ORCID,Franke James8ORCID,Rötter Reimund P49ORCID,Müller Christoph7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sustainability Science, LUT University , 53850 Lappeenranta , Finland

2. Agroecology, University of Helsinki , 00014 Helsinki , Finland

3. Applied Statistical Methods, Natural Resources Institute Finland , 00790 Helsinki , Finland

4. Tropical Plant Production and Agricultural Systems Modeling (TROPAGS), University of Göttingen , 37077 Göttingen , Germany

5. Ecosystem Modelling, Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research , 15374 Müncheberg , Germany

6. Global Change Research Institute, Czech Academy of Sciences , 60300 Brno , Czech Republic

7. Climate Resilience, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) , Member of the Leibniz Association, 14412, Potsdam , Germany

8. Department of the Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago , Chicago, IL 60647 , USA

9. Centre of Biodiversity and Sustainable Land Use, University of Göttingen , 37077 Göttingen , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Lack of nitrogen limits food production in poor countries while excessive nitrogen use in industrial countries has led to transgression of the planetary boundary. However, the potential of spatial redistribution of nitrogen input for food security when returning to the safe boundary has not been quantified in a robust manner. Using an emulator of a global gridded crop model ensemble, we found that redistribution of current nitrogen input to major cereals among countries can double production in the most food-insecure countries, while increasing global production of these crops by 12% with no notable regional loss or reducing the nitrogen input to the current production by one-third. Redistribution of the input within the boundary increased production by 6–8% compared to the current relative distribution, increasing production in the food-insecure countries by two-thirds. Our findings provide georeferenced guidelines for redistributing nitrogen use to enhance food security while safeguarding the planet.

Funder

Ministry of Education

Youth and Sports of Czech Republic

MAPPY project

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

NSF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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