NEW Nitrate monitoring in groundwater

Posted on Tuesday 24 May 2022

To monitor nitrate in water supplies, iFLUX is teaming up with Hydrometrics. They developed a sensor to directly measure nitrate losses.

Nitrate threatens water quality

Nitrate, NO3, is a main nutrient for plants. It occurs naturally in soil and dissipates by extensively farming. Nitrogen fertilizers are often used to nourish the soil. But when nitrates enter our food chain through groundwater and surface water, in which they dissolve, nitrates can be toxic.

When leaching into the soil into the water supply, we speak of nitrate contamination. This can happen due to irrigation water containing fertilizers, septic systems, wastewater treatment plants, dairies and natural conditions.

How to solve nitrate contamination?

Many countries around the world are in the process of adopting nitrate caps via land discharge allowances to manage nitrate losses into freshwater bodies and groundwater drinking supplies from agricultural production. Europe, for example, aims to protect water quality across Europe by preventing nitrates from agricultural sources polluting ground and surface waters. For this purpose they initiated the Nitrates Directive  as part of the Water Fromework Directive

One area that remains unclear is how nitrate losses will be reliably measured to monitor and enforce these limits. Current approaches are principally based on modelling, rather than direct measurement of nitrate losses, as options such as regular physical sampling or real-time sensors are too expensive to be scalable. To address this, Lincoln Agritech  has developed a sensor capable of measuring the concentration of nitrates in groundwater via monitoring wells.


All information about this nitrate sensor can be downloaded in this brochure: