SOIL STRATEGY PROVIDES SOLID GROUNDING FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

Environmental Panorama
International
October of 2007

 

Head Office Press Office - 24-Oct-2007 - With climate change taking hold, soil needs protecting in equal measure to air and water, says a new strategy to be unveiled today (16 October) by the Environment Agency.

"Soil is a living ecosystem that acts as a buffer, protecting the environment from harm," said Environment Agency Soil Policy Manager Phil Chatfield.

"It is an essential link between air and water, plays an important role in storing greenhouse gases, can reduce downstream flood risk and, of course, grows our food."

Soil: a precious resource is the Environment Agency strategy for protecting, managing and restoring soil, in the face of climate change. The strategy prioritises work on:

• Understanding and raising awareness of the storage and release of carbon in soils, and the potential impact on climate change. Conversely the impact of climate change on soils.

• Ensuring soil management is considered during environmental planning, policy, and guidance, in equal measure to air and water

• Protecting agricultural soil as a living resource that is vital to our economic wellbeing.

• Promoting good practice by industry to prevent new contamination of soils and working to clean-up existing contamination.

• Better understanding of soil biodiversity and collaborating on work to develop soil quality indicators for monitoring.

The Environment Agency’s soil strategy follows 2004’s State of Soils report, that found neglect and a lack of understanding of soils was threatening to permanently damage the resource.

"Leonardo da Vinci said that ‘we know more about the movement of celestial bodies than about the soil underfoot’ and 500 years later not much has changed," Mr Chatfield said.

"We use soil to grow most of our food, while the organisms in soil keep our drinking water clean, breaking down and locking away substances that may be harmful to people and wildlife. Soils also plays a vital role in maintaining the balance of gasses in the air we breathe.

"But in order to better understand and protect soil, all those involved in soil management, research and regulation need to work together. Poorly managed soils can increase downstream flood risk, bring about soil erosion and contamination, prevent rainfall from replenishing groundwater supplies, and cause substantial economic costs, for example through loss of crop yield and reduction in fish stocks."

The Environment Agency strategy - Soil: a precious resource - will be launched on 16th October 2007at a joint conference run by the Institute of Professional Soil Scientists and the Society of Chemical Industry at 14/15 Belgrave Square, London. To register to attend please contact Emily Moss at emily.moss@soci.org

Soil - provider of food

What does it do?

Soil acts as an anchor for plants, providing water, oxygen and nutrients for crops and plants and produces more than 99 per cent of the world's food.

What is happening?

23 per cent of the worlds usable land area has been degraded to some extent, mainly by soil erosion caused by overgrazing, deforestation and agriculture.

The area of soil usable for cultivation available per person has declined by more than a fifth since 1975 (0.32 hectares to 0.25 hectares) - this is down to both soil loss and population growth. The typical western diet requires more than twice as much usable soil - (0.6 hectares)

The equivalent of up to a 1cm thick layer of soil can be lost each year from some areas. This is unsustainable.

In England and Wales erosion moves some 2.2 million tonnes of arable topsoil every year. Topsoil is the most fertile part of the soil profile as it contains the most nutrients. This is where seeds germinate.

Some 97 per cent of lowland grassland (such as hay meadows) has been lost since 1930, and 84 per cent of English heathland has been lost since 1800.

Soil - regulator of air and water

What does it do?

Soil, water and air are strongly interdependent and must be managed together. Soil plays a key role in climate change, although its exact role needs to be understood better. UK soils are estimated to store 10 billion tonnes of carbon - this is more than the annual global emissions of carbon dioxide. Changes in the way that the land is used can result in some of this carbon being released.

What is happening?

The equivalent of around two per cent of the UK’s carbon emissions are cancelled out by farming and forestry - this could be increased by planting more woodland.

Nitrous oxide from soils contributes at least four per cent of UK greenhouse emissions. Levels are increased when inorganic nitrogen fertilisers and manure are added to soil. The nitrates from these fertilisers also has a detrimental effect on the water we use.

Soil erosion contributes towards increased phosphate concentrations found in more than half the rivers in England and Wales.

Soil - home for wildlife

What does it do?

Soil is a complex ecosystem, home to more than 100 species of soil invertebrates and fungi that are included in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan. This includes the large garden bumblebee, mole cricket and various beetles and ants. Half of all species live in the soil.

There are more bacteria in a handful of soil than there are people on earth. Without them, the nitrogen in soil would not be available to plants. Of the tens of thousands of bacterial species in soil, most have yet to be identified. Little is known of their specific roles.

What is happening?

Eroded soil can smother riverbed gravels, harming aquatic plants, invertebrates and the eggs of fish. Trout spawning beds in 29 out of 51 river reaches surveyed in Southern England contained more than 15 per cent of fine sediment, a threshold at which half the egg and larvae are likely to die. Salmon are also effected in this way.

Soil with high zinc content near a smelting works in Avonmouth, Bristol was linked to an absence of earthworms.

Most of the 35 terrestrial and freshwater priority habitat types of the UK Biodiversity Action Plan are adversely affected by soil related problems. These include lowland heathland, lowland meadows, upland hay meadows, chalk rivers.

Soil - filter and flood defender

What does it do?

Soil acts as a filter for water, breaking down chemicals and pathogens. The bacteria and fungi in soil break down most pesticides to less than one thousandth of their original concentration. They are nature’s sewage works and yet we have only imprecise knowledge of how they are affected by changes in land use and the use of pesticides.

Soil can act as a flood defence by slowing the passage of rainfall to surface waters.

A hectare of soil can store and filter a year’s worth of drinking water for around 1000 people.

Every year, soil recycles the carbon and nutrients in 100 millions tonnes of livestock manure and nearly five million tonnes of treated sludge from human sewage. During land applications, care needs to be taken to ensure that contaminant levels do not build up to unacceptable levels in the soil.

What is happening?

The Centre for Ecology and Hydrology and the University of Wales, have shown that in areas where trees have been planted, rainfall infiltrates the soil at rates 60 times greater than that on adjacent grassland.

Pontbren Initiative, Wales.

In Pontbren, Llanfair Caereinion, near Welshpool in mid-Wales, farmers are taking a more sustainable approach to soil management. The aim to restore woodland cover from 1.5% to 15% of the catchment area. Using agri-environment grants from the Forestry Commission and Welsh Assembly Government and with advice from extension bodies such as Coed Cymru, the group have fenced off the least productive areas of land e.g. stream banks and marginal areas, to plant trees. Results from the initiative are now being used to measure the effects of upland management practices on flooding and soil erosion.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship
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