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Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom

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Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom. / Stevens, Carly; Leach, A.; Dale, Sarah et al.
In: Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts, Vol. 16, No. 7, 01.07.2014, p. 1563-1569.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Stevens, C, Leach, A, Dale, S & Galloway, J 2014, 'Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom', Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts, vol. 16, no. 7, pp. 1563-1569. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3EM00690E

APA

Stevens, C., Leach, A., Dale, S., & Galloway, J. (2014). Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom. Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts, 16(7), 1563-1569. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3EM00690E

Vancouver

Stevens C, Leach A, Dale S, Galloway J. Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom. Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts. 2014 Jul 1;16(7):1563-1569. Epub 2014 Jan 30. doi: 10.1039/C3EM00690E

Author

Stevens, Carly ; Leach, A. ; Dale, Sarah et al. / Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom. In: Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts. 2014 ; Vol. 16, No. 7. pp. 1563-1569.

Bibtex

@article{b7f1cafd32a64d56976ca7d4e45cf68c,
title = "Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom",
abstract = "The global nitrogen (N) cycle has been transformed by human use of reactive N as a consequence of increased demand for food and energy. Given the considerable impact of humans on the N cycle, it is essential that we raise awareness amongst the public and policy makers as this is the first step in providing individuals and governments the opportunity to reduce their impact on the N cycle and reduce the environmental and health consequences of N pollution. Here we describe an N footprint tool for the UK developed as part of the N-PRINT program. The current per capita N footprint in the UK is 27.1 kg N per capita per year with food production constituting the largest proportion of the footprint (18.0 kg N per capita per year). Calculating an N footprint for 1971 (26.0 kg N per capita per year) demonstrates that per capita N footprints have increased slightly. The average UK footprint is smaller than that found in the USA but is higher than the Netherlands and Germany. Scenario analysis demonstrates that reducing food protein consumption to the levels recommended by the FAO and World Health Organization reduces the overall N footprint by 33%. Consuming a vegetarian diet and consuming only sustainable food both decreased the N footprint by 15% but changes in energy use have a much smaller impact.",
keywords = "nitrogen",
author = "Carly Stevens and A. Leach and Sarah Dale and J. Galloway",
year = "2014",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1039/C3EM00690E",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "1563--1569",
journal = "Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts",
issn = "2050-7887",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Personal nitrogen footprint tool for the United Kingdom

AU - Stevens, Carly

AU - Leach, A.

AU - Dale, Sarah

AU - Galloway, J.

PY - 2014/7/1

Y1 - 2014/7/1

N2 - The global nitrogen (N) cycle has been transformed by human use of reactive N as a consequence of increased demand for food and energy. Given the considerable impact of humans on the N cycle, it is essential that we raise awareness amongst the public and policy makers as this is the first step in providing individuals and governments the opportunity to reduce their impact on the N cycle and reduce the environmental and health consequences of N pollution. Here we describe an N footprint tool for the UK developed as part of the N-PRINT program. The current per capita N footprint in the UK is 27.1 kg N per capita per year with food production constituting the largest proportion of the footprint (18.0 kg N per capita per year). Calculating an N footprint for 1971 (26.0 kg N per capita per year) demonstrates that per capita N footprints have increased slightly. The average UK footprint is smaller than that found in the USA but is higher than the Netherlands and Germany. Scenario analysis demonstrates that reducing food protein consumption to the levels recommended by the FAO and World Health Organization reduces the overall N footprint by 33%. Consuming a vegetarian diet and consuming only sustainable food both decreased the N footprint by 15% but changes in energy use have a much smaller impact.

AB - The global nitrogen (N) cycle has been transformed by human use of reactive N as a consequence of increased demand for food and energy. Given the considerable impact of humans on the N cycle, it is essential that we raise awareness amongst the public and policy makers as this is the first step in providing individuals and governments the opportunity to reduce their impact on the N cycle and reduce the environmental and health consequences of N pollution. Here we describe an N footprint tool for the UK developed as part of the N-PRINT program. The current per capita N footprint in the UK is 27.1 kg N per capita per year with food production constituting the largest proportion of the footprint (18.0 kg N per capita per year). Calculating an N footprint for 1971 (26.0 kg N per capita per year) demonstrates that per capita N footprints have increased slightly. The average UK footprint is smaller than that found in the USA but is higher than the Netherlands and Germany. Scenario analysis demonstrates that reducing food protein consumption to the levels recommended by the FAO and World Health Organization reduces the overall N footprint by 33%. Consuming a vegetarian diet and consuming only sustainable food both decreased the N footprint by 15% but changes in energy use have a much smaller impact.

KW - nitrogen

U2 - 10.1039/C3EM00690E

DO - 10.1039/C3EM00690E

M3 - Journal article

VL - 16

SP - 1563

EP - 1569

JO - Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts

JF - Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts

SN - 2050-7887

IS - 7

ER -