How soil depletion is putting the global food supply in jeopardy

Time: It’s a strange notion, but some experts fear the world, at its current pace of consumption, is running out of useable topsoil. The World Economic Forum, in collaboration with TIME, talked to University of Sydney professor John Crawford on the seismic implications soil erosion and degradation may have in the decades to come.

Is soil really in danger of running out?

A rough calculation of current rates of soil degradation suggests we have about 60 years of topsoil left. Some 40% of soil used for agriculture around the world is classed as either degraded or seriously degraded – the latter means that 70% of the topsoil, the layer allowing plants to grow, is gone. Because of various farming methods that strip the soil of carbon and make it less robust as well as weaker in nutrients, soil is being lost at between 10 and 40 times the rate at which it can be naturally replenished. Even the well-maintained farming land in Europe, which may look idyllic, is being lost at unsustainable rates.

Why haven’t we heard more about this?

Probably because soil isn’t sexy. People don’t always think about how it’s connected with so many other things: health, the environment, security, climate, water. For example, agriculture accounts for 70% of our fresh water use: we pour most of our water straight onto the ground. If soil is not fit for purpose, that water will be wasted, because it washes right through degraded soil and past the root system. Given the enormous potential for conflict over water in the next 20-30 years, you don’t want to exacerbate things by continuing to damage the soil, which is exactly what’s happening now. [Continue reading…]

Another reason soil is something the average American doesn’t think about is because it has been degraded in language. We call it dirt and dirt is hard to value.

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2 thoughts on “How soil depletion is putting the global food supply in jeopardy

  1. rosemerry

    Monsanto,Shell, pesticide manufacturers …corporations with their own agendas have long outspent natural farming advocates like Vandana Shiva in making “developed and underdeveloped” countries assume that their products and methods are better than careful use of soil in a way to replenish and improve it in more sustainable way.

  2. Steve Zerger

    How is it that humans never learn such basic facts about their interdependence with the web of life around them? It seems incredible after so many civilizations throughout history have followed this path. As Derrick Jensen put it: forests precede them and deserts dog their heals. We’ve finally run out of virgin soil. This will be the first collapse which will be planetary wide.

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