Nitrous oxide emissions are accelerating with growing demand for fertilizer and meat

At the heart of this challenge is the prodigious use of fertilizers and a growing global population's increasing demand for meat.

As Earth, climate and atmospheric scientists, we track and have just published the most comprehensive assessment yet of a powerful greenhouse gas from food production: nitrous oxide, or N2O.

After carbon dioxide and methane, N2O is the most consequential greenhouse gas humans are releasing into the atmosphere. While there is less N2O than in the atmosphere, it is 300 times more powerful at warming the planet, and it remains in the atmosphere, holding in heat, for over a century. Today, atmospheric N2O levels are about 25% higher than before the Industrial Revolution, and they're still rising at an accelerating rate.

N₂O’s atmospheric concentration was fairly steady until the 1800s, when it began rising quickly. Measured in Antarctic ice cores (green) and through modern measurements (red). Credit: BoM/CSIRO/AAD

Annual N₂O emissions sources and change over the decade of 2010-2019. Measured in millions of metric tons. Credit: Global Carbon Project, CC BY

Credit: The Conversation

Credit: The Conversation