08/06/07 
            Kemira GrowHow is calling for greater perspective in the environmental
              debate surrounding the use of Nitrogen fertilisers. The company
              has pulled together the facts about fertilisers in a new booklet
              called Improving Your Nitrogen Footprint, which it is launching
            at Cereals 2007. 
            
            
            
            The booklet explains why farmers should not feel guilty about
              using Nitrogen fertilisers to boost yields since, without them,
              we could only continue to feed slightly over half the world’s
              current population of 6.3 billion. It also provides practical guidance
              for farmers to make sure their choice and use of fertilisers is
            as efficient and, therefore, as environmentally-friendly as possible. 
            The general view is that producing Nitrogen fertiliser requires
              loads of energy. In truth this is not the case. The total energy
              demand of UK agriculture is less than 2% of the country’s
              energy requirement and, of course, not all of that demand is connected
              with fertiliser use. 
            The production process itself is actually incredibly efficient
              and the factories in Britain are some of the most efficient. In
              fact, the energy required for a tonne of British Ammonium Nitrate
              is around 11 GJ (Gigajoules). In comparison, on average across
              the EU25 it takes almost 14 GJ, whilst for Ammonium Nitrate produced
              outside the EU the average is just over 15 GJ. 
            Fertilisers allow farmers to produce more food from each hectare
              of land. Research shows that a crop of wheat grown with the optimum
              amount of Nitrogen fertiliser will produce seven times more energy
              than was used to make, transport and spread that fertiliser. The
              crops grown will also capture four times more CO2 from the atmosphere
              than was produced in the fertiliser manufacturing process. 
            Of course this does not mean that efforts to minimise agriculture’s
              Nitrogen footprint should stop. We must all look for ways to improve.
              More efficient use of Nitrogen comes from using tools like GrowHow’s
              EnCompass nutrient planning software, Nitrogen Calculator and the
              N-Min testing service. The company’s extensive R&D programme
              is also yielding results to help customers leave a smaller Nitrogen
              footprint. 
             One of the biggest steps farmers can take to minimise their Nitrogen
              footprint is to use a British produced product. Just as ‘Food
              Miles’ are reduced by buying locally so are ‘Fertiliser
              Miles’. On average a British produced fertiliser travels
              140 miles compared to a typical import from a non-EU country which
              will have travelled around 2000 miles. In transport terms to deliver
              a bag of AN to farm a fertiliser manufactured outside the EU will
              use five times more energy than one made in Britain. 
            To conclude, since we all have to eat, producing Nitrogen fertiliser
              is arguably the only essential use for our limited resources of
              fossil fuels. All the other uses simply make our lives more comfortable
              and enjoyable but, we could survive without them. 
            For a free copy of Improving Your Nitrogen Footprint please send
              an email with your name and postal address to kemira-growhow.uk@kemira-growhow.com 
            
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