Written evidence submitted by Canterbury Christ Church University (SH0097) to the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee on Soil health. First Report of Session 2023–24, HC 245.
Discussion paper
Rintoul-Hynes, N., Galani Yamdeu, J., Sollen-Norrlin, M. and Ferguson, C. 2023. Written evidence submitted by Canterbury Christ Church University (SH0097) to the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee on Soil health. First Report of Session 2023–24, HC 245. UK Parliament.
Authors | Rintoul-Hynes, N., Galani Yamdeu, J., Sollen-Norrlin, M. and Ferguson, C. |
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Type | Discussion paper |
Abstract | Executive summary Soils are fundamental to ecosystem functioning in agricultural soils and therefore their ability to provide public goods. Agri-environment policy measure progress towards improving soil health through various physio-chemical or biological means; however, these are no longer fit for purpose. This paper is split into two sections: soil health indicators, covering physio-chemical characteristics and biodiversity, and soil contamination, dealing with heavy metals, pharmaceuticals and microplastics. Within this document, we make a series of recommendations to improve monitoring and subsidy schemes under the new Environmental Land Management schemes. New policy frameworks also need to consider known and emerging contaminants if they are to be a true representation of the health of our soils. Recommendations are given below, split into: physio-chemical characteristics, biodiversity, heavy metals, pharmaceuticals and microplastics. Physio-chemical indicators: 1. Expand on the soil health indicators quantified under the ELMS to include several more that are mentioned under the Countryside Survey (i.e. pH, bulk density, soil carbon, organic matter, total nitrogen, mineralizable nitrogen and total phosphorous), and offer a set of relevant tests related to soil health, taking into account basic soil characteristics, cropping systems and/or climate. Biological indicators: 1. Any agreements attaching subsidy payments to improvements in soil biodiversity need to be long-term and might need to include staged and proxy payments. This is to account for the longer timeframe that soil communities may take to respond to new land management approaches compared to physio-chemical characteristics. Heavy metals: 1. Expand on heavy metals that are used as soil health indicators under the Countryside Survey (total copper, zinc, cadmium, and nickel) to include several more that are prevalent in agricultural soils. Pharmaceuticals: 1. First, there is a need for prioritization: there are more than 1,900 active pharmaceutical compounds in use, making it a challenge to study all of them at once. Prioritization will allow identifying those compounds that can pose the greatest risk to the UK soil, plants, environment, and public health. Microplastics: 1. Define ‘microplastics’ clearly as an environmental contaminant in policy documents. |
Keywords | Soil health; Soil health indicators; Soil quality; Pharmaceuticals; Heavy metals; Microplastics |
Year | 2023 |
Publisher | UK Parliament |
Official URL | https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/118384/html/ |
Related URL | https://committees.parliament.uk/publications/42415/documents/210844/default/ |
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm5804/cmselect/cmenvfru/245/report.html | |
Output status | Published |
File | File Access Level Open |
Publication dates | |
28 Nov 2023 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 22 Jan 2024 |
Additional information | Written evidence submitted by Canterbury Christ Church University (SH0097) to the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee on Soil health. First Report of Session 2023–24, HC 245. |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/96x66/written-evidence-submitted-by-canterbury-christ-church-university-sh0097-to-the-house-of-commons-environment-food-and-rural-affairs-committee-on-soil-health-first-report-of-session-2023-24-hc-245
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