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Economically Raising Nitrogen Use Efficiency . By: Paul Hodgen. So What did we learn :. A few things we did learn. NUE is currently 33% for Cereal Grains. Proven that Variability is at a very small scale in the field.
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Economically Raising Nitrogen Use Efficiency By: Paul Hodgen
A few things we did learn • NUE is currently 33% for Cereal Grains. • Proven that Variability is at a very small scale in the field. • Current Precision Ag technology does not address Variability at this level during the growing season.
Does the cost of this Technology Pay? • Is the applicator a fixed cost or variable cost? • Fixed. • What does basic Accounting Say about determining feasibility of a process? • Figure out if the return covers the Variable Cost. Never use Fixed costs to decide to produce or not too.
Problem with this • The Producer will never have enough acres to justify the fixed cost. • Coop’s do!! • Do we actually know what the return is for the Fertilizer dollar spent? • Yes!!
What is the Current Return for 40 bu/acre Yield Goal of Winter Wheat? • If Anhydrous Ammonia cost $400/ton. • That is 0.25 cents per lb of actual Nitrogen. • 40 bushel wheat calls for 80 lbs of Nitrogen. • That is $19.50/acre for Nitrogen. • If only 33 % gets used, then that means our return on Nitrogen is $6.50/acre for winter wheat.
Basically What does this mean? Bad business on the Producers part. Great Business for the Fertilizer Industry.
So what can be done to increase this. • Currently Oklahoma State is trying to bring technology to the Oklahoma wheat producer that will address the variability at the 1 meter squared level, in the growing season. • But does this mean that our profit margin per acre will increase?
So why does this Technology not raise Profit margin? • Nitrogen is a mobile in the soil and in the plant. • This means that the Economic law of Diminishing Returns is applied. • What is this Law? • Basically it states that the amount of unit output increases at a decreasing for each additional unit of input.
How does that translate into anything? • We can predict the yield for winter wheat at Feekes 5, and will apply a prescribed rate of Fertilizer for that 1 m2 field element size. • But does the crop use that Fertilizer then? • Not necessarily so!!
Crop Response • Long term research at Oklahoma State and at Nebraska, have shown that after 30 years the check (No Nitrogen) yield 80% of the maximum Nitrogen rate. • Magruder Plots after over 100 years of no Nitrogen wheat still produces an average of 16.1 bushel/acre while the NPK plus lime averaged 33. • This means that some of the Nitrogen was not utilized by the crop!
Mineralization • Climate conditions that favored mineralization of the Organic Material • The soil supplied the nutrients. • Can we predict what the response index will be at Harvest at Feekes 5? • OSU is working on that very problem.
So How will Knowing the Response Index help? • Means that for the first time producers will have a reliable method to determine the economic return on fertilizer. • Then the producer can apply fertilizer only where he can maximize profit margins. • What does this mean for yields?
Yield effects • Using a response index might lower yield per acre, because there is not enough of a return. The fertilizer will not pay for it’s self. • Could raise yield, apply fertilizer where the crop will respond, Maximize the good areas, and limit loss on the poor areas.
The bottom line • Either way, the profit margin will increase. • This is the bottom line, producers will only use methods that increase profit margins. Otherwise, it is bad business. • Production Agriculture must be treated as a business and nothing else. It is an Industry. It is time that we (the Agriculture Industry) start acting like it.
Questions? • Yes, Dr. Raun?