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Inorganic Nitrogen: Anthropogenically driven climate change from…
Inorganic Nitrogen: Anthropogenically driven climate change from detrimental impacts on the atmosphere
Sources
How is it produced
what are the inflow costs / resources, outflow / waste cost
What has it replaced in a natural form of production - how did we get away without it in the past before its discovery / commerciallisation
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Economy
How has this been enabled in conventional economics - supply / demand, establishment on companies who service this market (1)
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Use of inorganic N
Food production
is our current level of food production enough or over what is actually need anyway SUPPLY & DEMAND? As supply increases so does demand? Example of population(and increases), nutrient needs and current food production FAO?
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Impacts
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Climate
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what is 'normal'
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who control normal (markets): suppliers, governments or consumers?
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Water systems
Eutrophic conditions are being observed having deleterious effects of wetlands and rivers and their inhabitants
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Solutions
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can we reach the same levels of production therefore not impacting food production economies and consumer demand
is using monocultural farming methods the best for agricultural production, can other methods offer a more balanced, less needy ecosystem for the same outputs - albeit altering our practices
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Who o why, what shall we do?
Are there any natural solutions to the sequestration of atmospheric N? can we use these to our advantage - /
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The idea of sustainability ............... how does our current methods meet or not meet these criteria?
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