NRDC is a non-profit environmental advocacy organization. We use law, science, and the support of 3.1 million members and online activists to protect the planet's wildlife and wild places and to ensure the rights of all people to clean air, clean water, and healthy communities. NRDC was founded in 1970 and our people helped write some of America's bedrock environmental laws, including the Clean Water Act and many of the implementing regulations. Today, our team of more than 600 lawyers, scientists, economists, policy advocates, communications experts, and others work across the United States and the globe from our offices in Beijing; Chicago; New Delhi; New York; San Francisco; Santa Monica; and Washington, D.C.
NRDC is seeking a Summer Schneider Fellow to work with the Food and Agriculture team in our Santa Monica or Washington D.C. offices. Must be a Stanford student to apply.
Position Summary:
The Soils Team in the Food & Agriculture Sector would like to request a Schneider fellow to help with our team’s burgeoning work to reduce US nitrous oxide emissions.
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is both a potent greenhouse gas and the largest uncontrolled source of ozone-depleting emissions. Over 75% of domestic N2O emissions are associated with agriculture, and of that, 55% comes from fertilizers. 17% of crop-related N2O emissions are a result of nitrogen fertilizer that was not taken up by plants and enters waterways and volatizes into N2O downstream. Improving nitrogen management can reduce agricultural N2O emissions and protect ecosystems and people. In the Midwest alone, improved nitrogen management can reduce N2O emissions by 50% and simultaneously reduce nitrate pollution in surface and groundwaters.
Nitrogen fertilizers also have huge impacts on energy consumption worldwide, as fertilizer production consumes 1-2% of the global energy supply, 3-5% of the world’s natural gas production, and accounts for 1-3% of global CO2 emissions. There is significant opportunity to decarbonize the production of nitrogen fertilizer, mainly by improving the process by which ammonia, a key ingredient in ammonium nitrate fertilizers, is made. To chart a path to more sustainable fertilizer use, we need to consider all alternative fertilizer production systems.
We are requesting a Schneider fellow to help us explore opportunities to reduce the impact of fertilizer production and application nationally, including potential regulatory options through the Montreal Protocol, legislative options in a handful of key states in the U.S., and funding options through the Farm Bill. We need help identifying decarbonization levers with clean hydrogen, and roughly quantifying the emissions reduction potential from those decarbonization levers. The fellow will conduct critical research, write strategy memos and policy briefs, analyze available N2O data, organize and liaise with key NGO and academic partners, and propose model policy language. The fellow will also have the opportunity to join stakeholder meetings, including with legislators.
You may be responsible for:
Must be a Stanford Student to apply!
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