Dairy Exporter June 2021

Page 65

ENVIRONMENT CO DIARY

The good soil: reducing nitrogen fertiliser Words by: Hugh Jackson

A

round the Mid Canterbury region, I have seen a lot of farmers who have been proactively working towards reducing their nitrogen losses over the past few years. Managing nitrogen loss onfarm is good farm practice and can be done in a variety of ways. Reducing the volume of nitrogen coming into a farm system and becoming more efficient at using that nitrogen is a great way to reduce nitrogen loss. One way to reduce the volume of nitrogen coming into your system is by reducing nitrogen fertiliser application. This brings environmental benefits, including improving water quality and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. It is also essential for some farmers to make changes to meet national and regional regulation, such as the nitrogen cap.

SYNTHETIC NITROGEN CAP DEADLINE

As most of you will be aware, the synthetic nitrogen cap is coming into effect on July 1 this year. This means all pastoral farmers will be required to ensure the amount of synthetic nitrogen fertiliser applied is less than 190kgN/ha/year. Farmers will also be required to record and report their synthetic nitrogen fertiliser use to their regional council.

DairyNZ consulting officer for Mid Canterbury, Hugh Jackson.

For farms not ready to meet the incoming nitrogen cap, there is the option to apply for a resource consent this year, which gives time to adjust your practices accordingly by 2023. Contact your regional council for more details. It can be difficult working out where to start when reviewing your fertiliser use, so here are a few tips to help plan. Even farms not affected by the nitrogen cap can make changes to on-farm management, to reduce overall nitrogen fertiliser use.

STRATEGIES TO REDUCE TOTAL NITROGEN FERTILISER

• Have a monthly nitrogen fertiliser plan and monitor it, to check you are on track to stay within your fertiliser budget throughout the year. • Reduce application rates to no more than 40kg N/ha in early spring and then to 0.8kg N/ha per day of round length. • Optimise conditions for clover growth

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | June 2021

and get paddocks soil tested to help identify if a lack of nutrients is limiting pasture or clover growth (pH, P, K and Mo). To avoid the shading of clover, careful grazing management is also important. • Skip a few paddocks when pasture growth rates are high and silage making is not wanted/needed. • Consider missing areas of higher fertility within paddocks, such as the front of paddocks, and areas around troughs. DairyNZ also has great examples of this work in action, through the Selwyn and Hinds project. Farmers in these regions have been on a journey to reduce nitrogen loss and have great real farm examples to support on-farm change. Have a look at dairynz.co.nz/selwynhinds. • For more information about the regulation, visit dairynz.co.nz/nitrogen-cap • Hugh Jackson is a DairyNZ consulting officer for Mid Canterbury.

STEP CHANGE EVENTS DairyNZ’s Step Change programme is supporting dairy farmers to reduce their footprint while improving profit. During June and July, a series of events will help dairy farmers respond to environmental limits and find out how environmental progress could be used in discussion with banks. • Visit dairynz.co.nz/stepchange.

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Income gains from tiny spaces

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page 89

Four attributes of colostrum management

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page 88

Meal not metal

3min
pages 74-75

Off for a comfy liedown

4min
pages 72-73

Kitted out for calving

3min
pages 70-71

TO BE REGENERATIVE: verb, not noun

4min
pages 46-47

European market rebounding, but Chinese risk

3min
page 18

Editor's note

2min
page 7

50 years ago in the Dairy Exporter June

2min
pages 90-92

Generating value from dairy beef

1min
page 89

An efficient rotary system

1min
page 88

Minimum wage rise no joke

5min
pages 86-87

Conversations save lives

6min
pages 84-85

Staying strong onfarm

5min
pages 82-83

The perfect farming match

7min
pages 76-79

How resilient areNew Zealand pastures?

3min
pages 80-81

The good soil: Reducing nitrogen fertiliser

2min
page 65

Making a game plan to improve the whenua

6min
pages 66-69

The effluent efficiency experts

8min
pages 62-64

The science-based organic advocate

9min
pages 58-61

Taking grazing to the next level

6min
pages 54-57

On a ‘regen journey’

5min
pages 52-53

Aligned for the future

9min
pages 42-45

Engage but ground the practice in science

5min
pages 49-51

Once-a-day milking stigma a “thing of the past”

2min
pages 40-41

Eliminating human error

2min
page 39

Once-a-day ‘OKIE DOKIE’ for Oaklands

10min
pages 34-37

Want to change milking frequency? Plan for it

3min
page 38

Connecting on the rural business journey

4min
pages 30-31

NZ Merino embraces regenerative agriculture

4min
pages 32-33

One shot at wintering right

2min
pages 28-29

Chinese tea, with a cream twist

3min
pages 26-27

Farming with a higher purpose

8min
pages 22-25

Steady as she goes for dairy market

2min
pages 20-21

A lifetime of memories

3min
page 13

Irish margin biggest in Europe

6min
pages 14-17

Embracing change for good

2min
page 12

Younger than 50, older than 60

3min
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Breaking barriers

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