Soil Health Benchmarks PRESS RELEASES

BENCHMARKS project aims define and harmonise soil health monitoring approaches across Europe for a range of land-uses. It brings together 29 partner organisations from across Europe,  The European Commission, The Joint Research Council and representatives of the business and land management sectors, at Wageningen University. BENCHMARKS is a 5-year transdisciplinary research project focused on monitoring soil health across Europe.

Are the soils of Europe considered unhealthy?
A joint assessment undertaken by the Soil Health and Food (SH&F) mission board and the Joint Research Centre (JRC) states that 60-70% of soils in Europe are currently considered unhealthy due to e.g. pollution, excess nutrients compaction and soil degradation (A Soil Deal for Europe (European Commission, 2022a).

What is the solution proposed for Europe?
The European Commission SH&F mission has set the goal to have 75% of European soils healthy or significantly improved by 2030, in line with a new EU law on the protection of Soil Health.  The private sector too, is proposing explicit visions of sustainable food systems, such as the 1000 landscapes for 1 billion people (1000 landscapes, 2022), the 100-million farmers platform of the World Economic Forum (World Economic Forum, 2022) and the Regen10 initiative of the World Business Council on Sustainable Development (WBCSD, 2022).

So how does BENCHMARKS contribute to this?
Measuring the success of these public and private initiatives through the harmonised monitoring of European soils is an essential, but enormously complex task. It requires coherent yet context-specific monitoring on multiple scales, for multiple land uses, across all EU Member States. BENCHMARKS will work together with stakeholders (farmers, foresters, urban planners, value chain representatives, researchers, local governance and policy makers) from across 24 contrasting landscapes to define how to monitor soil health across Europe, while also considering the local context of land management.

The goals of the BENCHMARKS project are to:

  • To provide a clear, easy-to-use tool for evaluating soil health, that is transparent, harmonized, and cost-effective.
  • To define appropriate indicators that are relevant to the assessment of soil health for a range of land uses and climatic zones across Europe.
  • A soil health dashboard appropriate for use at a range of scales (field to European) for agricultural, forestry, and urban settings.
  • Contribute to improving existing European policies and regulations related to soil health.

 

BENCHMARKS receives €12m in funding from the European Commission, as part of the Horizon Europe Call ‘HORIZON-MISS-2021-SOIL-02-02 to ‘validate and further develop indicators for soil health and functions’.