Abstract

The hot summer of 2018 posed many challenges with regard to water shortages and yield losses, especially for agricultural production. These agricultural impacts might further pose consequent threats for the environment. In this paper, we deduce the impact of droughts on agricultural land management and on water quality owing to nitrate pollution. Using national statistics, we calculate a Germany-wide soil surface nitrogen budget for 2018 and deduce the additional N surplus owing to the dry weather conditions. Using a model farm approach, we compare fertilization practices and legal restrictions for arable and pig breeding farms. The results show that, nationwide, at least 464 kt of nitrogen were not transferred to plant biomass in 2018, which equals an additional average nitrogen surplus of 30 kg/ha. The surplus would even have amounted to 43 kg/ha, if farmers had continued their fertilization practice from preceding years, but German farmers applied 161 kt less nitrogen in 2018 than in the year before, presumably as a result of the new implications of the Nitrates Directive, and, especially on grassland, owing to the drought. As nitrogen surplus is regarded as an “agri-drinking water indicator” (ADWI), an increase of the surplus entails water pollution with nitrates. The examples of the model farms show that fertilization regimes with high shares of organic fertilizers produce higher nitrogen surpluses. Owing to the elevated concentrations on residual nitrogen in soils, the fertilization needs of crops in spring 2019 were less pronounced than in preceding years. Thus, the quantity of the continuously produced manure in livestock farms puts additional pressure on existing storage capacities. This may particularly be the case in the hot-spot regions of animal breeding in the north-west of Germany, where manure production, biogas plants, and manure imports are accumulating. The paper concludes that water shortages under climate change not only impact agricultural production and yields, but also place further challenges and threats to nutrient management and the environment. The paper discusses preventive and emergency management options for agriculture to support farmers in extremely dry and hot conditions.

Highlights

  • The summer of 2018 was one of the hottest and driest in Europe [1]

  • We calculated nitrogen budgets for two model farms in order to highlight the effects of fertilization practices in certain farm types

  • With a soil surface budget, we show the influence of the weather conditions in 2018 on the pollution potential of nitrates inputs from agriculture for two fictive model farms according to the rules of the German Fertilization Ordinance as affective in 2018 [31]

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Summary

Introduction

The summer of 2018 was one of the hottest and driest in Europe [1]. Like in other European countries, precipitation in 2018 fell far below the long-term mean (Figure 1a). This refers to all months between February and November 2018 [2]. In comparison with the long-term mean, extended sunny periods between April and November dominated [1] (Figure 1b). These dry and sunny weather conditions led to a drastic reduction in soil moisture in autumn 2018 [3]. In September and October 2018, the usable field capacity dropped to around 30%, with the exception of south-east Bavaria in southern Germany, where values above

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