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Fertilized World
A Mixed Blessing
If we don’t watch out, agriculture could destroy our planet. Here’s how to grow all the food
we need with fewer chemicals.
N. Nitrogen. Atomic number seven. Unnoticed, untasted, it nevertheless fills our stomachs. It is the
engine of agriculture, the key to plenty in our crowded, hungry world.
Without this independent-minded element, disinclined to associate with other gases, the machinery of
photosynthesis cannot function—no protein can form, and no plant can grow. Corn, wheat, and rice, the
fast-growing crops on which humanity depends for survival, are among the most nitrogen hungry of all
plants. They demand more, in fact, than nature alone can provide.
Enter modern chemistry. Giant factories capture inert nitrogen gas from the vast stores in our atmosphere
and force it into a chemical union with the hydrogen in natural gas, creating the reactive compounds that
plants crave. That nitrogen fertilizer—more than a hundred million tons applied worldwide every
year—fuels bountiful harvests. Without it, human civilization in its current form could not exist. Our
planet’s soil simply could not grow enough food to provide all seven billion of us our accustomed diet. In
fact, almost half of the nitrogen found in our bodies’ muscle and organ tissue started out in a fertilizer
factory.
Yet this modern miracle exacts a price. Runaway nitrogen is suffocating wildlife in lakes and estuaries,
contaminating groundwater, and even warming the globe’s climate. As a hungry world looks ahead to
billions more mouths needing nitrogen-rich protein, how much clean water and air will survive our demand
for fertile fields?
The nitrogen dilemma is most starkly visible in China, a country that loves its food and worries that supplies
might run out. To the casual visitor, that anxiety se
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