Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Stocktake study of current fertilisation recommendations across Europe and discussion towards a more harmonised approach

Suzanne Higgins, Saskia Keesstra, Z. Kadziuliene, Lionel Jordan‐Meille, David P. Wall, Alessandra Trinchera, Heide Spiegel, Taru Sandén, Andreas Baumgarten, Johannes Lund Jensen, Juliane Hirte, Frank Liebisch, Susanne Klages, Philipp Löw, Katrin Kuka, Maarten De Boever, Karoline D’Haene, Sevinç Madenoğlu, Hesna Özcan, Wieke Vervuurt, J.J. de Haan, Willem van Geel, Bo Stenberg, Pascal Denoroy, R. Mihelič, Alar Astover, Raquel Mano, Cristina Sempiterno, F. Calouro, Giuseppe Valboa, Helena Aronsson, Tore Krogstad, Stanislav Torma, José Luis Gabriel, Péter László, Nils Borchard, Bartosz Adamczyk, Anna Jacobs, Beata Jurga, Bożena Smreczak, B. Huyghebaert, Morgan Abras, Raimonds Kasparinskis, Eloïse Mason, Claire Chenu

European Journal of Soil Science · 2023

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Summary

Abstract The European Commission has set targets for a reduction in nutrient losses by at least 50% and a reduction in fertiliser use by at least 20% by 2030 while ensuring no deterioration in soil fertility. Within the mandate of the European Joint Programme EJP Soil ‘Towards climate‐smart sustainable management of agricultural soils’, the objective of this study was to assess current fertilisation practices across Europe and discuss the potential for harmonisation of fertilisation methodologies as a strategy to reduce nutrient loss and overall fertiliser use. A stocktake study of current methods of delivering fertilisation advice took place across 23 European countries. The stocktake was in the form of a questionnaire, comprising 46 questions. Information was gathered on a large range of

Subject
Soil fertility & nutrient management
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1111/ejss.13422
Catalogue ID
SNmp2b2w55-9q0wfn
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