INTERNATIONAL KOREAN CHRISTIAN ACADEMY
TEACHER: Fátima Castillo.
TOPIC: Soil Protection.
OBJECTIVE: to know how can we protect the soil.
Soil protection measures
Chemical and physical impacts on soil are either irreversible or can only be reversed at a very high cost. Therefore, the precautionary principle has absolute priority in soil protection.
Context
It takes millennia for soils to form. At the same time, this raw material is finite. Overexploitation can result in nutrient depletion and soil erosion, and even to complete destruction. Climate change exacerbates these effects, for example through periods of drought or more frequent heavy rainfall. Every year, some ten million hectares of soil are destroyed in this way worldwide, which corresponds to an area around one third of the size of Germany. The amount of land available for agricultural use is shrinking, while at the same time the number of people that require food is rising.
These developments have immediate consequences, in particular for smallholders in developing countries, because soil degradation has direct impacts not only on their income, but also on their food situation. A decade ago, a family might have been able to cultivate three hectares of cassava, but today the usable area will already have shrunk by half – and with it the size and quality of the harvest.
Soil is the second-largest carbon store on Earth after the oceans. Together, they contain more CO2 than all of the forests and the atmosphere together. Soil degradation, however, releases large quantities of CO2 from the soil. Every year, some 24 billion tonnes of soil are lost simply through erosion, for example by wind and weather, or water. This has massive consequences for agriculture and the climate. While carbon as an organic material in the soil is vital to the latter’s fertility, in the form of CO2 in the atmosphere, it exacerbates global warming.
Best practices for sustainable land use are well known and are economically viable. Despite this, they are applied only to a limited area. Disseminating these practices is difficult. In many countries, soil protection does not receive the political attention it needs. The responsible institutions often fail to tackle the issue in an appropriate manner. As a result, there is a lack of incentives, such as secure land rights for agricultural enterprises, to ensure that they use soils in a resource-friendly and sustainable way. Smallholders in particular frequently lack the know-how to apply soil-friendly farming methods to their land, or the money for initial investments.
ASSIGNMENT: Make a sinoptic table about the topic.
ACTIVIDAD: hacer un cuadro sinoptico del tema.
NOTA: enviar la asignación el día jueves 14 de Mayo.
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