The Haber-Bosch process converts nitrogen (N2) and hydrogen (H2) into ammonia (NH3) over iron-based catalysts. Today, 50% of global agriculture uses Haber-Bosch NH3 in fertilizer. Efficient synthesis requires enormous energy to achieve extreme temperatures and pressures, and the H2 is primarily derived from methane steam reforming. Hence, the Haber-Bosch process accounts for at least 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions (1). Electrochemical N2 reduction to make NH3, powered by renewable electricity under ambient conditions, could provide a localized and greener alternative. On page xxx of this issue, Suryanto et al.(2) report highly efficient and stable electrochemical N2 reduction based on a recyclable proton donor. This study builds on earlier work showing that an electrolyte containing a lithium salt in an organic solvent with a sacrificial proton donor was unique in its ability to unequivocally reduce N2 (3,4). In both studies, it is still unclear why lithium is so critical.Neighboring fields of homogeneous and bio-catalysis provide insight. The nitrogenase enzyme selectively reduces N2 to NH3 with a Faradaic efficiency of 65% at ambient N2 pressure (5), far higher than has been achieved with heterogeneous catalysts (see the figure). Studies of nitrogenase and homogeneous mimics have revealed the crucial role of proton donation rate to activate N2. Nitrogenase moderates access of protons to active sites through internal channels through an anhydrous and hydrophobic protein matrix; electrochemical studies showed that the isolated catalytic cofactor in aqueous solution undergoes a catastrophic loss of efficiency (6). The biomimetic compound reported in 2003 by Yandulov and Schrock (7) could reduce N2 efficiently only if the proton source and reducing agent were added slowly. Chalkley et al. (8) later showed that moderate proton donating ability led to optimal efficiency.Singh et al.'s models predict that inhibiting proton access to the electrode, so that N2 adsorption is no longer blocked, enhances selectivity (9). Nonetheless complete inhibition of access to protons will prevent NH3 formation; hence their model implies that moderate access to protons leads to optimum rates, albeit possibly at the cost of selectivity. Aqueous solutions provide unhindered proton access, and so aqueous electrochemical paradigms produce NH3 in quantities indistinguishable from background contamination (4). However, in 1993, Tsuneto et al. reported efficient NH3 synthesis in an organic electrolyte containing a small amount of ethanol as a proton source and a lithium salt, noting that nonlithium salts yielded negligible NH3 (3). Later isotopic labeling experiments proved that only a lithium ion (Li + ) electrolyte could unequivocally reduce N2 (4).Under ambient conditions, lithium metal can dissociate the stable N2 bond (3); however, such strong N2 binding generally results in even stronger binding to hydrogen (12). Moreover, in the homogeneous systems and nitrogenase, nitrogen hydrogenation precedes N≡N bond scission (7, 11). As s...