Recently, our Federal Government announced impending mandates to reduce emissions associated with fertilizer use. These mandates, coupled with supply chain issues and rising fertilizer costs, are creating challenges for farmers when developing their cropping plans. Nitrogen fertilizers produce nitrous oxide (N2O), commonly known as laughing gas, which is the most potent of the three main greenhouse gases. Agricultural emissions of N2O largely come from nitrogen in the soil not taken up by plants, and therefore over-application of nitrogen fertilizer results in higher emissions. In Canadian agriculture, N2O represents about 21% of total emissions. In December 2020, the federal government announced a new goal of reducing fertilizer emissions by 30% below 2020 levels by the year 2030. This target is part of the federal government’s environmental goal of achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.
The government asserts that the objective of the target is not to introduce a mandatory reduction in fertilizer use that is not linked to improving efficiencies and maintaining yields. Instead, the stated objective is to maximize efficiencies, optimize fertilizer use, and encourage innovation and collaboration within the agricultural sector. However, it is difficult to see how, with the available technologies and only a ten-year timeline, the goal of emission reduction could be met without mandating use levels or introducing payments for farmers to change their practices. This target puts Canadian farmers in a difficult situation, by asking them to compromise on their input use, potentially impacting production levels and financial returns, without compensation, resources to recover those losses elsewhere, or support and direction as to how they can reduce their emissions by this amount without impacting production.