Adding nitrogen fertiliser initially increases yield, but as the crop nears optimal N levels, yield gains plateau. Beyond this, extra N costs may not be recovered by additional grain valuethis defines the Break-Even Ratio (BER).
Growers should use current fertiliser and grain prices to estimate the N rate where fertiliser cost equals extra grain value. BER assumes a highly accurate base recommendation, so in normal years with stable prices (BER ~6-9), detailed BER analysis may only be a rough guide, especially when fertiliser prices are high compared to grain prices.
Example: Calcium ammonium nitrate costs 450/t (~1.66/kg N). Grain price is 150/t (0.15/kg). At the yield plateaus low end, 1 kg N produces 30 kg grain (4.50), covering fertiliser cost (1.66). At higher N rates, 1 kg N produces only 11 kg grain (1.65), barely covering cost, so extra N is uneconomical.
Break-Even Ratio (BER) for Nitrogen Fertiliser
Content Author: TEAGASC