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 Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Understanding the cost of soil erosion: An assessment of the sediment removal costs from the reservoirs of the European Union

Journal of Cleaner Production 2023 54 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Panos Panagos Diana Vieira, Emanuele Quaranta, Francis Matthews, Edouard Patault, Panos Panagos Panos Panagos Carlo De Michele, Emanuele Quaranta, Nejc Bezak, Konstantinos Kaffas, Epari Ritesh Patro, Panos Panagos Christian Auel, Anton Schleiss, Arthur Nicolaus Fendrich, Leonidas Liakos, Elise Van Eynde, Diana Vieira, Pasquale Borrelli, Panos Panagos

Summary

Researchers calculated the economic cost of soil erosion in the European Union by estimating how much sediment accumulates in reservoirs and what it costs to remove it, finding the bill likely exceeds 2.3 billion euros per year just from water erosion alone. This matters because understanding these off-site costs can help justify stronger soil conservation policies like the EU's Zero Pollution Action Plan.

Soil erosion is both a major driver and consequence of land degradation with significant on-site and off-site costs which are critical to understand and quantify. One major cost of soil erosion originates from the sediments delivered to aquatic systems (e.g., rivers, lakes, and seas), which may generate a broad array of environmental and economic impacts. As part of the EU Soil Observatory (EUSO) working group on soil erosion, we provide a comprehensive assessment of the existing costs of sediment removal from European Union (EU) catchments due to water erosion. These quantifications combine continental average and regionally explicit sediment accumulation rates with published remediation costs, integrating numerous figures reported in the grey literature. The cost of removing an estimated 135 million m3 of accumulated sediments due to water erosion only is likely exceeding 2.3 billion euro (€) annually in the EU and UK, with large regional differences between countries. Considering the sediment delivered through all soil loss processes (gullies, landslides, quarrying, among others) through extrapolating measured reservoir capacity losses, the sediment accumulation in the circa 5000 EU reservoirs exceeds 1 billion m3 with a potential cost of removal ranging between 5 and 8 billion € annually. These estimates, although not accounting for already implemented catchment mitigation measures, provide insights into one of the off-site costs of soil erosion at both the continental scale as well as the regional differences in economic burden. The provided estimates contribute to support policies such as the Soil Monitoring Law, the Zero Pollution Action Plan, the Farm to Fork strategy and the Water Framework Directive.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper