Is the nitrogen footprint fit for purpose? An assessment of models and proposed uses
Journal article, 2019

The nitrogen footprint has been proposed as an environmental indicator to quantify and highlight how individuals, organizations, or countries contribute to nitrogen pollution. While some footprint indicators have been successful in raising awareness of environmental pressures among the public and policy-makers, they have also attracted criticism from members of the life cycle assessment (LCA) community who find some footprints confusing and misleading as they measure substance and energy flows without considering their environmental impacts. However, there are also legitimate reasons to defend footprints as a useful class of indicators despite their incompatibility with LCA principles. Here, in light of this previous research and debate, we critically assess models and proposed uses for the nitrogen footprint, and explore options for further development. As the nitrogen footprint merely quantifies gross nitrogen emissions irrespective of time, location, and chemical form, it is a crude proxy of environmental and health impacts compared to other, more sophisticated environmental impact indicators. However, developing the nitrogen footprint toward LCA-compatible impact assessment would imply more uncertainty, more complexity, and more work. Furthermore, we emphasize that impact assessment has an unavoidable subjective dimension that should be recognized in any development toward impact assessment. We argue that the nitrogen footprint in its present form is already fit for some purposes, and therefore further development towards impact assessment may be unnecessary or even undesirable. For some uses it seems more important that the footprint has a clear physical meaning. We conclude that the best way forward for the nitrogen footprint depends crucially on what story it is used to tell.

Nitrogen footprint

Nitrogen

LCA

Footprint indicators

Impacts

Impact assessment

Author

Rasmus Einarsson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Christel Cederberg

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Journal of Environmental Management

0301-4797 (ISSN) 1095-8630 (eISSN)

Vol. 240 198-208

Subject Categories

Other Environmental Engineering

Environmental Management

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.03.083

PubMed

30939400

More information

Latest update

9/30/2019