Project
EU Horizon Research Project: Soil Health Benchmarks
BENCHMARKS proposes co-development within 24 European Living Labs of a multi-scale and multi-user focused monitoring framework that is transparent, harmonised and cost-effective. Underpinned by the best scientific knowledge and technologies this framework provides a clear soil health index for benchmarking, using indicators that are pertinent to the objective of assessment, applicable to the land use and logistically feasible.
Coordination Team
Background
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. Furthermore, different users at different scales (EU policymakers, value-chain businesses, land managers) will want to monitor soil health for different purposes.
The current soil health monitoring systems are, in many cases, apply a traditional minimum soil dataset approach focused on key agronomic soil chemical indicators, pollutants, pH, soil organic carbon (SOC), with a few easy to measure but not very informative soil biological and physical measurements. Furthermore, the monitoring systems are disjointed between users, and the application of indicators is often based on local logistical issues rather than the pertinence of the indicator to the objective of monitoring. Thus far there has been little cohesion across monitoring systems in terms of how indicators are selected and laboratory methods or sampling designs are applied. This has resulted in a lack of interoperability, leading to disjointed advice/regulations on the assessment of soil health and calls for an urgent intervention with the establishment of a framework for measuring soil health that is transparent, harmonised, cost-effective and widely adopted.
To address these challenges, BENCHMARKS proposes co-development within 24 European Living Labs of a multi-scale and multi-user focused monitoring framework that is transparent, harmonised and cost-effective. Underpinned by the best scientific knowledge and technologies this framework provides a clear soil health index for benchmarking, using indicators that are pertinent to the objective of assessment, applicable to the land use and logistically feasible.