Do farmers overuse nitrogen fertilizer to the detriment of the environment?
Author InfoSatya Yadav Willis Peterson K. Easter Abstract Increasing use of nitrogen fertilizer in U.S. agriculture has led to nitrate contamination of water resources. The main objective of the study is to determine if the current use of nitrogen exceeds the profit-maximizing level, since reducing such discrepancy, if any, could raise farmers’ profitability and enhance water quality making it a win-win situation. Specific objectives of the study, however, are two-fold. First, develop an appropriate methodology for estimation of an agronomic production function utilizing panel data with several treatments from experimental plots. Second, using experimental data from 1987 through 1990 for three farm sites in southeastern Minnesota, empirically estimate the production function and profit maximizing level of nitrogen application. Our results show that both the current recommended rate, 150 1b/acre, and farmers’ use, 176 1b/acre, of nitrogen exceed the profit maximizing level of nitrogen i
Related Questions
- Precision farming—adjusting nitrogen fertilizer applications to fit the precise needs of crops—sounds like a good solution. Is it enough to fix the pollution problem?
- Do farmers overuse nitrogen fertilizer to the detriment of the environment?
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