by: Arsenio Toledo
(Natural News) Governments all around the world are passing policies to take care of nitrogen emissions – and these policies are putting the worldwide food supply in danger.
The people pushing this so-called “war on nitrogen” claim that excess nitrogen within the environment is hazardous and pollutes the land, the water and the air. They are saying it even depletes the ozone layer. (Related: Dutch government to seize as much as HALF the country’s farmland under the guise of curbing nitrogen emissions.)
The United Nations is on the forefront of those claims, suggesting without evidence that nitrogen just isn’t only a contributor to so-called climate change, but that nitrogen pollution can be one way or the other a threat to human health and is detrimental to the worldwide economy.
“Nitrogen is a primary nutrient essential for the survival of all living organisms on earth,” admitted Leticia Carvalho, principal coordinator of the United Nations Environment Program’s Marine and Freshwater Branch. “However the world must wake as much as the problems of nitrogen waste and the opportunities to take joint motion for its sustainable use.”
Sri Lanka, Netherlands leading the “war on nitrogen”
Two of the major nations leading the globalist “war on nitrogen” are Sri Lanka and the Netherlands.
In April 2021, the Sri Lankan government led by then-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa banned the usage of all chemical fertilizers within the small island nation of twenty-two million people.
Around a yr after that call, the federal government was forced by widespread protests to roll back the ban after it led to a rapid collapse in food yields, with some estimates suggesting an annual drop of a minimum of 30 percent in paddy yields.
“I cannot recall any time prior to now once we needed to struggle a lot to get a good harvest,” lamented 65-year-old W.M. Seneviratne within the eastern Sri Lankan village of Agbopura on the time. “Last yr, we got 60 bags [of rice] from these two acres. But this time it was just 10.”
“These crops need urea. Compost is just not adequate and we didn’t even get any of the organic fertilizer that was distributed by the federal government,” he added. Urea, a widely used and low-cost chemical fertilizer containing 46 percent nitrogen, is a vital element within the life cycle of crops for farmers all over the world like Seneviratne.
And within the Netherlands, the Dutch coalition government has just received the green light from the European Union to maneuver forward with a plan to chop nitrogen emissions in half by 2030 by expropriating land from the nation’s farmers.
The plan sets aside nearly 1.5 billion euros ($1.64 billion) for farmers who’re willing to “voluntarily” sell their farms to the state in exchange for sizeable compensation. All agricultural work on seized lands would then stop immediately to stop large-scale emissions of nitrogen from the realm. Some 3,000 farms are expected to be seized inside the subsequent few years.
Multiple other countries is likely to be joining the attacks on farmers for his or her supposedly harmful nitrogen emissions soon, particularly those nations which have committed to reducing their nitrogen emissions.
Learn more about how the climate alarmists are coming for the food supply at GreenTyranny.news.
Watch this video from The Recent American as Alex Newman and documentary filmmaker James Patrick discuss how the Dutch plan to seize farmland under the guise of restricting nitrogen emissions is only a plot to transfer more land to the elites.
This video is from the channel The Recent American on Brighteon.com.
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