by bart » Mon 27 Sep 2004, 19:02:52
I think you are right after all, Oneill!
However, it is natural gas that is used as the basis for nitrogen fertilizers, not oil.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')atural gas is the feedstock for nitrogen production and its cost represents 70 to 80 percent of the expense of producing ammonia, the building block for all nitrogen fertilizer products. Nitrogen products are applied as fertilizers and are also used in the manufacture of ammoniated phosphate products such as diammonium phosphate (DAP). Thus, the current energy situation is having a dramatic negative impact on a majority of the U.S. fertilizer industry.
(from a 2003 press release from the fertilizer industry about the effects of higher natural gas prices:
http://www.tfi.org/Media/natural%20gas% ... -%20km.pdfAbout pesticides:
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')Most pesticides are derived from ethylene and propylene, which are obtained by catalytic cracking of crude petroleum oils, or from methane from natural gas.
from an online paper: "Energy and alternatives for fertilizer and pesticide use" Z.R. Helsel.
http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/NEWSLTR/v5n5/sa-12.htm In addition, much energy is used in the production of fertilizers and pesticides (not just as feedstocks). As Helsel notes in the paper cited above:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')f the total energy used in agriculture, about 51 percent was used for farm machinery operation and manufacture, 45 percent was invested in chemical fertilizers (mostly nitrogen), and only 2 percent went to production and application of pesticides. Although the total amount of energy used for pesticides is small, on a per unit weight basis more energy is used in the production of pesticides than any other agricultural input. On average, production of pesticides takes four to five times more energy per pound than nitrogen fertilizer production.