Soil Alert

With the rate at which we exploit it, pollute it, and take away from it today - without giving anything back - it’s not looking very good for soil health on this planet. 

Care and protection of air, water, and the marine environment has taken centre stage in the global climate debate for decades. According to Plastic Change  however, the content of micro- and nanoplastics in agricultural soil is now estimated to be up to 4-23 times higher than its concentration in the ocean. This is surprising, given how much media space is offered to plastic in the ocean, and how little to plastic in the soil, and soil health in general. Of course, all plastic pollution is negative, regardless of the hosting element, but this knowledge makes it time to add soil health to the list of priorities. 

Soil plays a pivotal role in the circularity of the entire Bioeconomy, and is an essential starting point for our entire existence, not to mention the basis for all food chains and for biodiversity on earth. Its state of health is deteriorating fast, and as such, it should get a spot on that centre stage. With an extra spotlight, or two.

There are two main concerns with the deteriorating soil health:
1)    We won’t have any soil left. 
2)    It can take up to 1,000 years to create a 2–3-centimetre layer of soil.

In a few more words, without healthy working soil, we will have no farmland left that is able to grow crops, fruits, and vegetables to feed us all. And with the rate at which we exploit it, pollute it, and take away from it, without giving anything back to it – we can’t afford to wait 1,000 years for a teeny tiny 2-3 centimetres.