Managing ammonia emissions from livestock production in Europe

Around 75% of European ammonia (NH 3) emissions come from livestock production. Emissions occur at all stages of manure management: from buildings housing livestock; during manure storage; following manure application to land; and from urine deposited by livestock on pastures during grazing. Ammonia...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental pollution (1987) 2005-06, Vol.135 (3), p.399-406
Hauptverfasser: Webb, J., Menzi, H., Pain, B.F., Misselbrook, T.H., Dämmgen, U., Hendriks, H., Döhler, H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Around 75% of European ammonia (NH 3) emissions come from livestock production. Emissions occur at all stages of manure management: from buildings housing livestock; during manure storage; following manure application to land; and from urine deposited by livestock on pastures during grazing. Ammoniacal nitrogen (total ammoniacal-nitrogen, TAN) in livestock excreta is the main source of NH 3. At each stage of manure management TAN may be lost, mainly as NH 3, and the remainder passed to the next stage. Hence, measures to reduce NH 3 emissions at the various stages of manure management are interdependent, and the accumulative reduction achieved by combinations of measures is not simply additive. This TAN-flow concept enables rapid and easy estimation of the consequences of NH 3 abatement at one stage of manure management (upstream) on NH 3 emissions at later stages (downstream), and gives unbiased assessment of the most cost-effective measures. We conclude that rapid incorporation of manures into arable land is one of the most cost-effective measures to reduce NH 3 emissions, while covering manure stores and applying slurry by band spreader or injection are more cost-effective than measures to reduce emissions from buildings. These measures are likely to rank highly in most European countries. Reducing NH 3 emissions following spreading of manures to land ranks highly because of the large abatement potential and relatively small cost.
ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2004.11.013