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Vitenskapelig artikkel

Soil degradation in Europe is projected to accelerate under changing land use and climate

Mehdi H. Afshar, Amirhossein Hassani, Pasquale Borrelli, Panos Panagos, David A. Robinson, Dani Or, Nima Shokri

Soil degradation threatens food security and environmental sustainability, yet future projections of it are rare. Using projections from 18 global climate models under two Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5) and land-use projections from the Land Use and Climate Across Scales Land Use Change (LUCAS LUC) dataset, we assess future soil vulnerability to degradation by linking a Soil Degradation Proxy (SDP) to climate, land-use, soil characteristics, and socio-economic factors at 7433 observation sites across Europe. We project that by 2071–2100, ~59% of sites may become more vulnerable under the high-emission scenario. Cold forest regions in northern Europe are projected to face increased degradation pressure by ~+0.04SDP. However, some European croplands may improve locally through conversion to secondary lands, reduced human pressures, and natural recovery processes. These regionally specific trends highlight that, while soil degradation remains a major threat, proactive land management can mitigate soil vulnerability under future climate trajectories.

Publikasjonsdetaljer

Tidsskrift: Communications Sustainability, vol. 1, 2026

Internasjonalt standardnummer:
Online: 3059-4308

Vitenskapelig artikkel

År: 2026

Vitenskapelig verdi: Unassigned

Språk: Engelsk

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