Forcing fertilizer cuts to meet climate change goals will cost farmers dearly, according to a new study commissioned by Fertilizer Canada.
Undertaken by accounting firm Meyers Norris Penny (MNP) and released Monday by Ottawa-based Fertilizer Canada, the study suggests cutting fertilizer use to reduce on-farm emissions could cost growers nearly $48 billion over the next eight years.
Under Canada’s A Healthy Environment and a Healthy Economy, the federal government is envisioning a 30% absolute emissions reduction target for on-farm fertilizer use by the year 2030. Elsewhere, the European Union (EU) has proposed an absolute emissions reduction target and aims to achieve it through a 20% reduction of fertilizer use compared to 2020 levels.
But Fertilizer Canada – which represents manufacturers, wholesale and retail distributors of nitrogen, phosphate, potash and sulphur fertilizers – contends that any plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions must be done through what it describes as sustainable agricultural intensification; an approach that allows for significant reductions in agricultural emissions “without risking Canada’s contribution to global supply of food or economic growth within the sector.”