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Global nitrous oxide assessment

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Other publication

Global nitrous oxide assessment

The assessment offers insights into nitrous oxide emissions, a potent greenhouse gas and significant ozone-depleting substance. It includes projections of changes in stratospheric ozone levels and climate under different emission scenarios. It also reviews methods to reduce emissions from major sources. The goal is to provide information and actionable steps to reduce emissions by more than 40%, highlighting the need for urgent, sustainable solutions, particularly in food systems.

Kevin Hicks, Katy Brooke / Published on 13 November 2024

Citation

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) & Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations (2024). Global Nitrous Oxide Assessment. https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/46562.

The UNEP and FAO Global Nitrous Oxide Assessment launched at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, stresses that urgent action is needed to tackle rising nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions to keep global warming under (1.5°C). It is the first international report focused solely on nitrous oxide in over a decade.

N2O is a potent greenhouse gas. While its emissions come from natural and human-made sources, the assessment focuses mainly on reducing the emissions caused by human activities. Since 1980, these human-made emissions have risen significantly, with about 75% of this increase coming from synthetic fertilizers and manure in farming.

The assessment authors outline practical steps to reduce these emissions by over 40%, especially through changes in food systems activities. They emphasize the need for sustainable nitrogen management to cut N2O emissions and minimize the loss of other harmful nitrogen compounds.

In addition to identifying the problem, the authors address pathways that will help to reach climate goals, protect the ozone layer, and enhance air quality while ensuring food security and reducing other environmental impacts.

The authors stress that the assessment is an important tool for diverse stakeholders as it shows the urgent need for collaborative actions to reduce N2O emissions.

SEI authors

Kevin Hicks

Senior Research Fellow

SEI York

Katy Brooke

Project Coordinator

SEI York

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