New policy developments have emerged in relation to soil conservation after 2020. The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) 2023-2027, the proposal for a Soil Monitoring Law and the mission 'A Soil Deal for Europe' have shaped a new policy framework at EU level, which requires updated assessments on soil erosion and land degradation. The EU Soil Observatory (EUSO) successfully organised a scientific workshop on 'Soil erosion for the EU' in June 2022. The event has seen the participation of more than 330 people from 63 countries, addressing important topics such as (i) management practices, (ii) large scale modelling, (iii) the importance of sediments in nutrient cycle, (vi) the role of landslides and (v) laying the foundations for early career scientists. As a follow up, among the 120 abstracts submitted in the workshop, we received fifteen manuscripts, out of which nine were selected for publication in the present special issue. In this editorial, we summarize the major challenges that the soil erosion research community faces in relation to supporting the increasing role of soils in the EU Green Deal.

Panagos, P., Vieira, D., Eekhout, J.P.C., Biddoccu, M., Cerda, A., Evans, D.L., et al. (2024). How the EU Soil Observatory contributes to a stronger soil erosion community. ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 248 [10.1016/j.envres.2024.118319].

How the EU Soil Observatory contributes to a stronger soil erosion community

Borrelli P.
2024-01-01

Abstract

New policy developments have emerged in relation to soil conservation after 2020. The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) 2023-2027, the proposal for a Soil Monitoring Law and the mission 'A Soil Deal for Europe' have shaped a new policy framework at EU level, which requires updated assessments on soil erosion and land degradation. The EU Soil Observatory (EUSO) successfully organised a scientific workshop on 'Soil erosion for the EU' in June 2022. The event has seen the participation of more than 330 people from 63 countries, addressing important topics such as (i) management practices, (ii) large scale modelling, (iii) the importance of sediments in nutrient cycle, (vi) the role of landslides and (v) laying the foundations for early career scientists. As a follow up, among the 120 abstracts submitted in the workshop, we received fifteen manuscripts, out of which nine were selected for publication in the present special issue. In this editorial, we summarize the major challenges that the soil erosion research community faces in relation to supporting the increasing role of soils in the EU Green Deal.
2024
Panagos, P., Vieira, D., Eekhout, J.P.C., Biddoccu, M., Cerda, A., Evans, D.L., et al. (2024). How the EU Soil Observatory contributes to a stronger soil erosion community. ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 248 [10.1016/j.envres.2024.118319].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11590/469731
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