Fertilizer associated soil N2O emissions

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Managed soils methodology, synthetic and organic fertilizer applications. Calculates nitrous oxide emissions (N2O and CO2e) based on the quantity of nitrogen applied. Scenarios include synthetic and organic (e.g. manure, compost, sewage) fertilizers. Globally applicable.

Summary

This methodology represents nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions associated with the application of synthetic and organic nitrogen to managed soils. The data and calculation methodology is sourced from the IPCC, as published in Volume 4, Chapter 11 - N2O Emissions from Managed Soils, and CO2 Emissions from Lime and Urea Application of their 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories.


The methodology

Emissions model

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is produced naturally in soils through the processes of nitrification and denitrification. Nitrification is the aerobic (microbially-mediated) oxidation of ammonia to nitrate, and denitrification is the anaerobic microbial reduction of nitrate to nitrogen gas (N2). N2O is a gaseous intermediate in the reaction sequence of denitrification and a by-product of nitrification. One of the main controlling factors in this reaction is the availability of inorganic nitrogen in the soil. Human-attributable N2O emissions therefore arise where net nitrogen (N) additions are made to managed soils in the form of synthetic or organic fertilizers, manure, crop residues, or sewage sludge, all of which contain forms of nitrogen. This methodology describes N2O emissions associated with the application of N to managed soils via the organic and synthetic fertilizers.

Both direct and indirect emission pathways of fertilizer-N (i.e. fertilizer-associated nitrogen) are represented in the methodology. Direct N2O-N (nitrous oxide associated nitrogen) production is calculated on the basis of conversion factors which describe the rate at which N2O-N is produced in relation to the quantity of fertilizer-N added to the soil. Indirect emissions occur through volatilisation and/or leaching of fertilizer-N from the soil. These effects are each represented by (1) a factor describing the typical fraction of fertilizer-N which is volatilised/leached; and (2) a factor describing the rate at which this N is converted into N2O-N.

The total production of N2O-N attributable to a particular quantity of fertilizer-N is calculated by adding together all direct and indirect quantities. This is then converted into an N2O emission quantity on the basis of the relative molecular masses of N2O and N.

This methodology represents the IPCC Tier 1 approach.

Model data

Conversion factors for 5 fertilizer types are provided within this methodology: synthetic fertilizer and 4 types of organic fertilizer (e.g., compost, manure, sewage). Each fertilizer type is represented by a general direct N2O-N conversion rate (kg / kg), as well as an alternative direct conversion factor representing the specific context of rice cultivation. Also included for each scenario are the common factors for indirect (volatilised/leached) N conversion rates.

In addition, this methodology uses two general constants for deriving emissions quantities from N2O-N:

  • molecular mass ratio of N2O and N: the factor for converting a N2O-N quantity into N2O (44/28)
  • global warming potential of N2O: the factor for converting a N2O emissions quantity into CO2e - the quantity of CO2 which would exert the same atmospheric warming effect.

Activity data required

N2O emissions are directly proportionate to the quantity of fertilizer-N added, which therefore needs to be specified in order to make an emissions calculation. Indirect emissions associated with leaching can be incorporated optionally, if appropriate to the scenario under consideration.

Calculation and results

This emissions calculated by this methodology represent those attributable to the specified quanity of fertilizer-N added to managed soils.

The methodology calculates two emissions quantities: (1) the absolute quantity of N2O; and (2) N2O emissions expressed in terms of CO2e.


Additional information

Nomenclature

Following IPCC advice, the term manure is used collectively to include both dung and urine (i.e., the solids and the liquids) produced by livestock.


Related methodologies

A number of other methodologies focus on emissions from managed soils. These include those arising from the addition of urine and dung, urea and carbonates/lime, as well as drained/managed organic soils.

 UIDLabel
X25KDYTT8Z0K organic, compost
VS3BR5K8N5T6 organic, manure
MH08H89IDA02 organic, other
2Q99NI9OWROR organic, sewage
SO13Z4OA380V synthetic fertilizer
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Name: Fertilizer_associated_soil_N2O_emissions
Full path: /business/agriculture/soil/inputs/other
Provenance: IPCC