0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

Plastic pollution of soils – assessing EU policies for a poorly regulated field

Environmental Sciences Europe 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jessica Stubenrauch, Katharine Heyl

Summary

This study assessed the extent to which EU policies protect soils from plastic pollution and found significant regulatory gaps. The analysis revealed that while some command-and-control regulations address specific microplastic entry pathways into soils, overall plastic production continues to increase, and the policies fail to comprehensively limit soil contamination through persistent rebound effects and lacking target stringency.

Body Systems

Abstract Plastic pollution is widespread in both aquatic and terrestrial environments and is also widely abundant in soils. Plastics in soils are problematic due to their persistence and near-irremovability from the environment. In soils, plastic particles can alter soil structure, impact microbial communities, impairing soil fertility and affecting plant growth. Plastic in soils poses risks to wildlife and human health through bioaccumulation and food chain transfer. At the same time, functioning soils are fundamental to ecosystem stability, agricultural productivity, and resilience against climate change. Against this background, effective policies to halt and, at best, minimise plastic pollution in soils are urgently needed. This article presents the results of a qualitative governance analysis which aimed to assess the extent to which EU policies protect soils from plastic pollution. Results show that detailed regulatory ‘command-and-control’ approaches address some entry pathways of micro- and nanoplastics into soils but fail to limit plastic pollution comprehensively. In fact, all policies suffer from multiple governance problems such as lacking target stringency, as well as rebound effects, which only partly minimise specific pathways of plastic entry into soil, while overall plastic production is increasing. Therefore, the real impact on soil plastic pollution remains limited. One approach to effectively address soil plastic pollution is a global climate policy which is aligned with the objectives of the Paris Agreement. In phasing out fossil fuels, plastic production would be phased out in parallel and hence plastic inputs into soils. A second-best approach is the use of economic policy instruments, such an an EU cap-and-trade system, which limits plastic pellet production by setting a strict and over time decreasing cap. Both approaches must be supplemented by improved command-and-control instruments.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Plastic Pollution in Soils: Governance Approaches to Foster Soil Health and Closed Nutrient Cycles

This governance analysis finds that existing European and German environmental regulations do not adequately address microplastic pollution in agricultural soils, and command-and-control legislation alone is insufficient to solve a problem driven by the sheer volume of plastic in circulation. The authors argue that phasing out fossil fuels globally is ultimately necessary to address plastic pollution at its source.

Article Tier 2

The extent and impacts of soil pollution by microplastics

This study examines the extent and impacts of soil pollution by microplastics, reviewing evidence of how microplastic particles accumulate in terrestrial environments and affect soil ecosystems, organisms, and agricultural systems.

Article Tier 2

Plastic particles in soil: state of the knowledge on sources, occurrence and distribution, analytical methods and ecological impacts

This comprehensive review of plastic particles in soil covered sources, occurrence, analytical detection methods, and ecological impacts, identifying gaps in knowledge about terrestrial plastic fate and effects compared to the more extensively studied marine environment.

Article Tier 2

Underestimated and ignored? The impacts of microplastic on soil invertebrates—Current scientific knowledge and research needs

This review highlights the critical gap in research on how microplastics affect soil invertebrates, noting that soil ecosystems receive far more plastic pollution than oceans yet the ecological consequences for soil fauna remain poorly understood and largely unstudied.

Review Tier 2

Sources, pollution, and ecological impacts of soil microplastics-A review

A comprehensive review summarized the sources, distribution, and ecological impacts of microplastics in soil environments, synthesizing evidence on how plastics affect soil organisms, structure, and agricultural productivity. The review calls for urgent policy action to address soil microplastic contamination as a threat to food security.

Share this paper