EU Nitrates Directive

The EU Nitrates Directive came into force in 1991 to limit water pollution, mandating a limit of 170 kilograms of organic nitrogen per hectare for slurry (diluted manure and urine from animals used as a fertiliser) and manure spreading on farmland.1โ€œNitrates Directive,โ€ Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, 2020. Archived December 24, 2020. Archive URL: https://archive.ph/Onkvi

Ireland is one of just five EU member states to have recently held derogations from the Directive. These allow โ€œderogation farmsโ€ to apply greater amounts of slurry and manure than typically afforded by the Directive, provided specified measures are undertaken.2โ€œDerogation from the Nitrates Directive โ€“ Process Explained,โ€ Irish Co-operative Organisation Society (ICOS), 2021. Archived January 26, 2022. Archive URL: https://archive.ph/ORILC

Belgium (Flanders region), Denmark, and the Netherlands have indicated they will not be renewing their derogations, leaving Ireland as possibly the only EU member state to seek a derogation from 2026 onward.3Amy Forde. โ€œWhy Denmark wonโ€™t be renewing its nitrates derogation,โ€ Irish Farmers Journal, April 18, 2024. Archived  April 18, 2024. Archive URL: https://archive.ph/SVEtR

The Nitrate Directive policy and associated national Nitrates Action Programmes aim to reduce nitrogen pollution, as well as mitigate the overall climate impact of farming.4โ€œNitrates Directive,โ€ Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, 2020. Archived December 24, 2020. Archive URL: https://archive.ph/Onkvi Nitrogen fertiliser can cause algal blooms and harm waterways, while its presence in soil increases emissions of the heat-trapping gas nitrous oxide that contributes to atmospheric warming.5Mark Sutton and Hans van Grinsven. โ€œThe European Nitrogen Assessment: Summary for policy makers (ENA)โ€ in: Sutton, M.A. et al, European Nitrogen Assessment (ENA), 2011. Archived April 12, 2024. Archive URL: https://archive.is/YMnU6

In 2021 the European Court of Auditors stated that Ireland was notable as being โ€œamong the highest greenhouse gas emitters per hectareโ€ due to being one of four EU countries which have a derogation from the Nitrates Directive.6โ€œCommon Agricultural Policy and climate: Half of EU climate spending but farm emissions are not decreasing.โ€ European Court of Auditors. June, 2021. Archived June 21, 2021. Archive URL: https://archive.ph/YihLR The Auditor also noted that, โ€œsince 2014, in Ireland, the area under derogation has increased by 34 percentโ€.

On September 6, 2023, the European Commission confirmed a reduction to Irelandโ€™s EU Nitrates Directive derogation limit.7โ€œCommission rules out re-visiting Irelandโ€™s Nitrates Derogation decisionโ€, Teagasc, September 6, 2023. Archived October 1, 2023. Archive URL: https://archive.is/ewlyE As a result, since January 2024, derogation farms have been required to reduce the intensity of slurry spreading from a maximum of 250 kilograms of organic nitrogen per hectare to 220 kg.

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