Abstract

Abstract The purpose of this study is to discuss the economic impacts stemming from variable-rate (VR) nitrogen fertilization, one of the main precision agriculture practices. Economic impacts are related to reduced nitrogen use and increased crop yields thanks to a better distribution of inputs, net from possible spatial and temporal uncertainty. This paper reviews N=31 case studies (in 29 articles) that compared the performance of VR nitrogen applications versus uniform treatments. The comparisons covered nitrogen fertilization for cereal crops, in particular wheat and maize, for different years and in different countries. Findings highlight relevant changes in amounts of nitrogen applied, with the evidence of higher nitrogen efficiency resulting in reduced operating costs, while changes in crop yields are less evident: VR applications and uniform applications substantially reach the same production level, and higher nitrogen use efficiencies are achievable without significantly compromising yields. Overall, net economic impacts are in favour of VR fertilization. This work can raise farmers’ and other stakeholders’ knowledge of the actual economic impacts stemming from the adoption of VR fertilization and helps policymakers to understand the economic impact of precision agriculture and the need to foster sustainability-based policies.

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