Nitrogen contamination in the southern half of Minnesota is so severe that 27 percent of the state's lakes and rivers could not be used as drinking water, according to a new and unexpectedly blunt assessment of the state's most prevalent form of water pollution.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) said Wednesday that, overall, 41 percent of Minnesota's streams and lakes have excessive nitrogen, all of them in the state's southern and central regions. The nutrient, which is used as fertilizer in agriculture and comes from wastewater treatment plants, can be toxic to fish and other forms of aquatic life. It is a primary cause of the vast oxygen-depleted area in the Gulf of Mexico known as the dead zone.
Even ambitious efforts could reduce nitrogen runoff by less than a third — and that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars, primarily in the agricultural regions of the state that contribute 70 percent of the total load, according to the MPCA's report.
The scope of the problem and the cost of fixing it are so daunting that state Agriculture Commissioner Dave Frederickson said he questions whether it would be possible to achieve any significant reduction.
"Maybe we are chasing our tail," he said after MPCA Commissioner John Linc Stine finished presenting the findings at a news conference Wednesday. "Maybe we will never get there."
But environmentalists, who have long been critical of state regulators' reluctance to tackle the nitrogen problem, said they were surprised and pleased at the candor and the depth of the analysis. Several said they expect it will inspire a debate about the fundamental problem — the agriculture industry's reliance on just two crops — corn and soybeans, both of which are primary drivers of the pollutant.
Current plans to attack the problem by persuading farmers to adopt expensive and not very effective methods to control nitrogen are just "lipstick on a pig," said Trevor Russell, watershed program director for Friends of the Mississippi River. "At some point we have to change the pig."
Farm groups say farmers have already made significant progress in managing the use of fertilizer and manure. Over time, fertilizer use has declined sharply and has become much more precise. New methods to clean nitrogen from surface runoff and drainage systems below row crops are increasingly being adopted, said Adam Birr, research director for the Minnesota Corn Growers Association.