Land Take and Soil Sealing—Drivers, Trends and Policy (Legal) Instruments: Insights from European Cities
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Aufsätze in Sammelwerken › Forschung
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International Yearbook of Soil Law and Policy 2018. Hrsg. / Harald Ginzky; Elizabeth Dooley; Irene L. Heuser; Emmanuel Kasimbazi; Till Markus; Tianbao Qin. Cham: Springer Schweiz, 2019. S. 83-112 (International Yearbook of Soil Law and Policy ; Band 2018).
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Aufsätze in Sammelwerken › Forschung
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Land Take and Soil Sealing—Drivers, Trends and Policy (Legal) Instruments
T2 - Insights from European Cities
AU - Naumann, Sandra
AU - Frelih-Larsen, Ana
AU - Prokop, Gundula
AU - Ittner, Sophie
AU - Reed, Matt
AU - Mills, Jane
AU - Morari, Francesco
AU - Verzandvoort, Simone
AU - Albrecht, Stefanie
AU - Bjuréus, Anna
AU - Siebielec, Grzegorz
AU - Miturski, Tomasz
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Urbanisation is an ongoing global trend that is associated with soil sealing and land take at the cost of agricultural land and other open landscape. While soil sealing and land take result in the loss of all soil functions and the loss of high-quality agricultural soils, the awareness of the magnitude and negative implications of these processes remains relatively low. In this article, we examine how seven EU cities have addressed the issues of land take and soil sealing through approaches to increase efficient land use. The cities include Cambridge, Milan, Nantes, Regensburg, Stockholm, Vienna and Wroclaw. Drawing on statistical analysis and qualitative interviews with city-level practitioners, we look at trends in soil sealing and land take and outline relevant policies and legislation that can prevent or reduce land take and soil sealing, as well as success factors and barriers to the implementation of these policy instruments. Results show that the reduction of land take and soil sealing cannot be implemented as an isolated programme but needs to be pursued as an integrated approach, together with other sustainability objectives, such as energy efficiency, conservation of agricultural land, reduction of traffic, and increase of biodiversity. Conclusions highlight the importance of a robust framework of national law and regulation and of setting quantitative land take targets taking a long-term vision of city development and assigning a value to soil. Moreover, focus should be on inner development before outer development, including the reuse of brownfields and investing in building renovation.
AB - Urbanisation is an ongoing global trend that is associated with soil sealing and land take at the cost of agricultural land and other open landscape. While soil sealing and land take result in the loss of all soil functions and the loss of high-quality agricultural soils, the awareness of the magnitude and negative implications of these processes remains relatively low. In this article, we examine how seven EU cities have addressed the issues of land take and soil sealing through approaches to increase efficient land use. The cities include Cambridge, Milan, Nantes, Regensburg, Stockholm, Vienna and Wroclaw. Drawing on statistical analysis and qualitative interviews with city-level practitioners, we look at trends in soil sealing and land take and outline relevant policies and legislation that can prevent or reduce land take and soil sealing, as well as success factors and barriers to the implementation of these policy instruments. Results show that the reduction of land take and soil sealing cannot be implemented as an isolated programme but needs to be pursued as an integrated approach, together with other sustainability objectives, such as energy efficiency, conservation of agricultural land, reduction of traffic, and increase of biodiversity. Conclusions highlight the importance of a robust framework of national law and regulation and of setting quantitative land take targets taking a long-term vision of city development and assigning a value to soil. Moreover, focus should be on inner development before outer development, including the reuse of brownfields and investing in building renovation.
KW - Transdisciplinary studies
KW - Soil sealing
KW - Land take
KW - Urbanisation
KW - Policy and legal instruments
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-00758-4_4
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-00758-4_4
M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies
SN - 978-3-030-00757-7
T3 - International Yearbook of Soil Law and Policy
SP - 83
EP - 112
BT - International Yearbook of Soil Law and Policy 2018
A2 - Ginzky, Harald
A2 - Dooley, Elizabeth
A2 - Heuser, Irene L.
A2 - Kasimbazi, Emmanuel
A2 - Markus, Till
A2 - Qin, Tianbao
PB - Springer Schweiz
CY - Cham
ER -