PRESS TELECONFERENCE
Thursday, May 28, 2009 1:00pm EDT
Download MP3 Recording of Teleconference (4.5 MB, 35 minutes) >>
The world's leading nitrogen scientists will discuss the launch of the Global Nitrogen Assessment to provide policymakers with neutral, consensus-based science on the consequences of increased global nitrogen use. These experts hope to spur coordinated action across scientific and policy spheres to prevent climate, food security, and public health impacts. The long-term goal is to increase awareness of nitrogen pollution and provide guidance to policymakers, similar to the climate change information the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) provides.
The Global Nitrogen Assessment is a project of the International Nitrogen Initiative, and supported by the Scientific Council on Problems in the Environment (SCOPE), the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
Teleconference participants include:
Reactive nitrogen is essential to modern life, from the ability to grow food to the production of energy. Yet its benefits and problems are not evenly distributed.
Nitrogen-starved regions in Africa suffer from poor crop yields and malnutrition, while in the U.S., Europe and Asia, most nitrogen is released through chemical fertilizer use. Other sources of nitrogen pollution include inadequate sewage treatment, animal manure and smokestack and tailpipe emissions.
Reactive nitrogen contributes to ozone layer depletion, smog, acidification of soils and water supplies, climate change, water pollution, coastal “dead zones,” and human health problems. Growing demand for corn for biofuels and other uses continues to accelerate nitrogen pollution.
Experts have identified many policy and technology solutions that can be applied now, from using chemical fertilizer more precisely to increasing fuel efficiency and manure management and improving sewage treatment.
Alan Townsend, University of Colorado
(303) 492-6865
James N. Galloway, University of Virginia
(434) 924-3437
Cheryl Palm, Columbia University
(845) 680-4462
Phil Robertson, Michigan State University
(269) 760-8364
For more information, contact:
Penelope Whitney, Resource Media
(415) 397-5000 x 313