FAO in the Philippines

“Stop soil erosion. Save our future.”

DA, DENR, FAO appeal for solidarity against soil erosion during Philippine celebration of World Soil Day.

Representatives of DA, DENR, and FAO signing Declaration of Solidarity against Soil Erosion.
06/12/2019

“Stop soil erosion, save our future.” This was the unified message imparted by the key officials of the Department of Agriculture (DA), Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), and FAO during the 2019 World Soil Day celebration held on December 5 at the DA’s Bureau of Soils and Water Management (BSWM) compound in Quezon City.

According to DA-BSWM OIC Director Sonia Salguero, it is not yet too late for more people to get involved in the global effort to stop soil erosion.

“We encourage everyone to do their part in soil conservation,” she said as she explained the importance of the annual global event to celebrate soil.

Speaking on behalf of Agriculture Secretary William Dar, DA Undersecretary and Chief-of-Staff Cheryl Marie Natividad-Caballero talked about the need for sustainable soil and water management and how it can be attained through the department’s new thinking in Philippine agriculture.

“We will vigorously develop and implement soil and water resources programs and technologies that will ensure the sustainability and viability of our resources,” Caballero said.

Undersecretary for Environment and International Environment Affairs Jonas Leones, representing Secretary Roy Cimatu, expressed the DENR’s support to the campaign for soil conservation. He pledged the DENR’s commitment to continue working with the DA and other relevant agencies for sustainable land management initiatives.

Assistant FAO Representative for Programme, Ms Tamara Duran, stressed that soil erosion can decrease soil health and productivity affecting the number and quality of crops that can be produced.

“Everyone should help raise awareness on the importance of soil health, because it will have an effect on human health since 95 percent of the food comes from the soil,” she emphasized.

Soil erosion, or the removal of the most fertile top layer of soil from the land surface, occurs naturally, but it is accelerated up to 1 000 times by unsustainable human activities particularly the removal of vegetative cover, down-slope tillage, overgrazing, deforestation, land leveling, and improper land-use changes.

It can take up to 1 000 years to produce two to three centimeters of soil. If nothing is done, soil erosion could lead up to 10 percent loss in crop production by 2050.