soil

In pictures: Soils and Climate Change on World Soil Day

Posted by Angela Glienicke — 3 December 2015 at 4:53pm - Comments
All rights reserved. Credit: Steve Morgan/Greenpeace
Andrei Yesengi - an indigenous Nenet man - in front of a thermokarst lake, which was drained due to the melting of the permafrost and erosion caused by climate change

As world leaders meet at the COP21 climate talks in Paris, World Soil Day is celebrated around the world on 4th December. World Soil Day aims to connect people with soils and raise awareness on their critical importance in our lives.

Soil is essential for life. It’s the basis for food, fuel and fibre production, as well as providing services vital for human well-being, like helping to remove pollutants from water. We should be protecting soils, instead the world’s soil is being degraded by the impacts of climate change and polluted by dirty fuels like coal.

GM crops and soil

Last edited 23 October 2001 at 8:00am
Publication date: 
30 March, 2000

Genetically modified (GM) crops pose a significant threat to the environment through pollution by GM pollen and the consequent flow of modified genes into the wider plant community. However, GM crops may also pose hazards to the ecology of soil. This briefing identifies four main areas of concern:

Download the report:

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