Syllabus: GS3/ Environment
Context
- A new study has revealed that soil pollution from toxic heavy metals and metalloids is significantly reducing crop yields and contaminating food supplies across the globe.
Key highlights
- The research found that between 14 percent and 17 percent of the world’s agricultural soils (About 242 million hectares) exceed safe thresholds for at least one hazardous metal.
- This contamination affects an estimated 900 million to 1.4 billion people living in high-risk regions.
- A heavily contaminated belt has been identified across low-latitude Eurasia, covering regions like southern Europe, the Middle East, South Asia, and southern China.
- The widespread contaminants are Cadmium, Arsenic, Cobalt, Nickel and Chromium.
Causes of Heavy Metal Accumulation
- Anthropogenic Causes: Mining, smelting, industrial activities, and intensive agriculture (excessive fertilizer and pesticide use).
- Natural Causes: Metal-rich bedrock and low rainfall in some regions that facilitate pollutant accumulation.
Impact of metal contamination
- Food Chain Contamination: Crops grown in polluted soils absorb heavy metals like cadmium, arsenic, lead, and mercury. These metals enter the human body through food consumption.
- Bioaccumulation: Long-term ingestion of low doses can lead to bioaccumulation, resulting in chronic diseases, including neurological and developmental disorders.
- Biodiversity Loss: Toxic metals harm beneficial organisms like earthworms, insects, and microbes, leading to reduced biodiversity both below and above the soil.
- Land Degradation: Continuous pollution makes soils barren, contributing to land degradation and desertification.
Concerns
- Data Gaps: Limited information from sub-Saharan Africa, northern Russia, and parts of central India may mean the issue is even more widespread.
- Food Trade Risks: Global food trade could transfer contamination to low-risk regions, threatening broader food security.
- Rising Demand for Metals: Increasing industrial demand is likely to worsen the contamination crisis without urgent mitigation measures.
Government Initiatives for Soil Conservation
- Soil Health Card Scheme: It provides farmers with soil nutrient status reports to encourage balanced fertilizer use and improve productivity.
- Promotion of Organic Farming: Initiatives like Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) encourage organic farming practices to maintain soil health.
- National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA): It focuses on enhancing soil health through integrated farming systems and agroforestry practices.
Global Initiatives
- Global Soil Partnership (GSP): It is an FAO-led initiative to improve global soil governance and promote sustainable soil management.
- United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD): It works to prevent land degradation and promote sustainable land management globally.
- It has a pledge for land degradation neutrality (LDN) by 2030.
- 4 per 1000 Initiative: It aims to increase soil carbon stocks by 0.4% annually to combat climate change and enhance soil health.
Way Ahead
- Establish regional soil health observatories and expand the coverage of soil surveys.
- Phytoremediation: Use of hyperaccumulator plants and microbes to clean contaminated soils.
- Circular Economy: Recycling and management of e-waste, industrial waste to prevent soil contamination.
- Farmer Awareness Programs: Educate farmers on heavy metal risks, safe agricultural practices, and alternative cropping systems.
Source: DTE
Previous article
Medical Tourism in India