ABSTRACT

More than half of the world population now lives in cities, and urban expansion continues as rural people move to cities. This results in the loss of land for other purposes, particularly soil for agriculture and drainage. This book presents a review of current knowledge of the extension and projected expansion of urban areas at a global scale.

Focusing on the impact of the process of 'land take' on soil resources and the ecosystem services that they provide, it describes approaches and methodologies for detecting and measuring urban areas, based mainly on remote sensing, together with a review of models and projected data on urban expansion. The most innovative aspect includes an analysis of the drivers and especially the impacts of soil sealing and land take on ecosystem services, including agriculture and food security, biodiversity, hydrology, climate and landscape. 

Case studies of cities from Europe, China and Latin America are included. The aim is not only to present and analyse this important environmental challenge, but also to propose and discuss solutions for the limitation, mitigation and compensation of this process.

part I|119 pages

Introducing and understanding the process

part II|94 pages

Impact of land take and soil sealing on soil-related ecosystem services

part IV|35 pages

Policy and good practices

chapter 17|11 pages

The European approach

Limitation, mitigation and compensation

chapter 19|5 pages

Soil sealing and land take as global soil threat

The policy perspective

chapter 20|2 pages

Conclusions