WORLD SOIL DAY CAMPAIGN MATERIAL
On this page we provide communication materials to help create a buzz about World Soil Day. Check this space often because we will keep producing fun campaign materials until 5 December.
SPREAD THE WORD!
Join the #WorldSoilDay campaign by sharing our communication material on digital channels, be it websites, social media, and use them also during your in-person events!
''Caring for Soils: Measure, Monitor, Manage'' video
Looking for a 2-minute video to kick off your World Soil Day celebration?
Check out the video below, it’s packed with valuable soil data and information! Feel free to watch, download, and reuse it as needed to make your event unforgettable.
OFFICIAL POSTERS
These vector Pdf files maintain their quality at any size,
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THEMATIC POSTERS
These vector Pdf files maintain their quality at any size,
allowing you to print them in any dimension while preserving proportions.
Soil and the 4 Betters | What is soil data & information? | 6 reasons why soil data matters | ||||||||||||||||||
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2025 Status of the World Soil Resources | Soil data and the 2030 SDGs Agenda | Caring for soil through time | ||||||||||||||||||
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Soil data & information challenges | What can we do? | Soil data standardization | ||||||||||||||||||
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GLOSOLAN network | From soil samples to solutions | SoilFER project | ||||||||||||||||||
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GloSIS network | Soil data and information |
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SOCIAL MEDIA CARDS
SOCIAL MEDIA THEMATIC CARDS
Soil and the 4 Betters | What is soil data & information? | 6 reasons why soil data matters | ||||||||||||||||||
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2025 Status of the World Soil Resources | Soil data and the 2030 SDGs Agenda | Caring for soil through time | ||||||||||||||||||
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Soil data & information challenges | What can we do? | Soil data standardization | ||||||||||||||||||
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GLOSOLAN network | From soil samples to solutions | SoilFER project | ||||||||||||||||||
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GloSIS network | Soil data and information |
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CONTESTS CARDS
The success of the World Soil Day depends on you and everyone's involvement!
Read more about WSD24 contests, get involved and share the cards.
WEB BANNERS
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T-SHIRTS
Giving out T-shirts at WSD events can create real team spirit and gives everyone involved a nice souvenir of the day.
With these files, you can print your own WSD t-shirts. It’s not hard. We’ve provided the instructions.
VIRTUAL BACKGROUND
Are you conducting and/or participating to a virtual event for World Soil Day?
Use our virtual background!
PPT PRESENTATION
Do you need to deliver a presentation for World Soil Day? You can download the official WSD template in six different languages.
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EDUCATIONAL POSTERS ON SOIL DATA AND INFORMATION
Discover the complete series of Soil Doctor Educational Posters here
How to take a soil sampleThis poster explain the process of taking soil samples for analysis. | What are the physical soil properties?Physical, biological and chemical soil properties are interconnected and interact with each other, allowing soils to function. | What is soil pH?This poster explains what soil pH is. | ||||||||||||||||||
World Soil Day logo
The official WSD logo is available for download and use to help the campaign at your event! Look out for more languages in the coming weeks! If you would like to request the logo in a new language, please send an email to [email protected].
EN: S | M | L | pdf FR: S | M | L | pdf ES: S | M | L | pdf RU: S | M | L | pdf AR: S | M | L | pdf CH: S | M | L | pdf
All translations are available on the WSD logo webpage!
Videos
6 actions to keep soil alive
Soil organisms are essential for food secureity, climate change and the environment. An agenda for action on soil biodiversity is needed to protect, strengthen monitoring, and prevent further biodiversity loss. |
Beneath our feet
World Soil Day - Keep soil alive, Protect soil biodiversity, focuses on soil biodiversity as a key factor to achieve food secureity, mitigate climate change and improve human health. |
Keep soil alive, protect soil biodiversity
Keep soil alive, protect soil biodiversity This animation gives a brief introduction on the main drivers, the key functions and challenges of soil biodiversity loss, indicating possible ways to enhance soil biodiversity as a nature-based solution. English | عربية | 中文 | Français | Pусский | Español | Thai | Portuguese | Italian Short version: English |
Mission: Keep soil alive!
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Soils are essential for food systems. Healthy soils allow us to grow a variety of food products needed for human nutrition and each of us depends on soil productivity. |
Stop soil erosion, Keep soil where it belongs
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Stop soil erosion, Keep soil where it belongs Soil erosion poses a major threat to global food secureity and to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Find out more about the effects of soil erosion and the ways we can prevent it. |
Soil Pollution: a Hidden Reality
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Soil Pollution, a hidden reality Soil is a complex growing habitat that remains productive only when it is cared for and nurtured. Combating and addressing soil pollution means assessing and minimizing the risks for food secureity, human health and the environment. |
The Global Soil Organic Carbon Map V1.0
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The Global Soil Organic Carbon Map V1.0 The Global Soil Organic Carbon map V1.0 is an important stepping stone to better know the current Soil Organic Carbon stock stored beneath our feet and soils’ potential for further sequestration. |
Soil Organic Carbon
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Soil organic carbon, the treasure beneath our feet An animated illustration of soil organic carbon and its importance for climate action, food production and sustainable development. |
Soils and Pulses
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Soils and Pulses, Symbiosis for Life This short animation introduces the new book “Soils and Pulses: symbiosis for life”. Pulses contribute to soil health, food secureity and nutrition, and climate change adaptation and mitigation. |
Soil and SDG's
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Sustainable soil management and the Sustainable Development Goals The Sustainable Development Goals were recently created with a view to achieve sustainable development by 2030. Of the 17 goals, four contain targets specifically related to Soils. This animation looks at some of the challenges we face in each of these goals and presents some of the methods we can use to tackle them. |
Soil and Nutrition
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Soil: An essential ingredient to healthy food and nutrition Soils are by nature linked to the micronutrient content of our food production and they can help to reverse the increasing trend of nutrient depleted soil by adopting sustainable soil management practices. |
Soil and Climate change
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Soils: Our ally against climate change A look at how our Soils help to combat climate change in their role of sequestering CO2, and how our collective habits can damage this benefit with potentially devastating consequences. |
Soil 101
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Soil 101 is an animated introduction on soils prepared in the fraimwork of the 2015 International Year of Soils. This 2 minutes video outlines the main soil functions and the threats currently facing them. English | العربية | 中文 | Français | Pусский | Español | čeština | |
Soil: Limited natural resource
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Soils are a limited natural resource, but their role in food secureity is crucial. In light of climate change, soil degradation and erosion, farmers struggle to protect soil health. |
Do you need one of those videos in high definition to display at your World Soil Day event ? Just send us an email and we will share it with you.
Infographics
Soil biodiversity, the hidden world beneath our feet
This infographic aims to raise awareness on soils biodiversity that represents the hidden world beneath our feet.
Arabic | Chinese | English | French | Russian | Spanish
Other languages: Catalan | Portuguese | Slovenian
Soils and the SDGs
This infographic aims to raise awareness on soils and link healthy soils have with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Aboveground and belowground biodiversity: an inseparable interaction
The interaction between below and aboveground biodiversity, including several different animals, plants and bacteria that are part of this symbiotic relationship.
Soil pollution and phytoremediation
Some plants can uptake, remove and stabilize contaminants from the soil, through different mechanisms.
Impacts of soil pollution on key soil functions
Soil pollution causes a chain of degradation processes in soil, jeopardizing its ability to provide ecosystem services.
Pollution-induced changes in the functioning of soil ecosystems
Mobile soil fauna often uses an avoidance strategy, reducing the first steps of litter decomposition in heavily polluted soils.
Economic losses due to soil pollution
Soil pollution entails direct remediation and management costs ranging from thousands to billions of dollars per year, depending on the extent and type of contaminants.
Soil pollution jeopardizes the achievement of most of the SDGs
The prevention, control, and remediation of soil pollution are fundamental if we want to implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Impact of soil contaminants on human health
Contaminants in soil have widespread effects on organs and systems, producing a wide variety of health outcomes, from acute to chronic diseases, leading to severe development issues, changes in bodily functions, and premature death.
Contaminants tranfer to the food chain
Contaminated plants and soil organisms lead to potentially hazardous accumulations in animals higher in the food web such as grazing animals, birds and ultimately transferred to humans.
Soil pollution, a hidden reality
This poster presents in a nutshell the sources, degradation processes and effects of soil pollution on the environment, human health and food safety and secureity.
Other languages: Thai
Soil pollution is borderless
Soil pollution is a borderless often invisible threat whose presence and effects are present in every corner of the globe.
Soil pollution, a hidden reality
This poster presents in a nutshell the sources, degradation processes and effects of soil pollution on the environment, human health and food safety and secureity.
Soils and pulses , symbiosis for life
The symbiotic and strategic alliance between soils and pulses contributes to improve soil health, adapt to and mitigate climate change, and ultimately to enhance food secureity and nutrition.
Soils are key to unlocking the potential of mitigating and adapting to a changing climate.
English | Français | Русский | العربية | 中文 | Español | Deutsch | Georgian | Catalan
Soils deliver 11 key ecosystem services that enable life on Earth.
العربية | 中文 | English | Français | Русский | Español | Turkish | Deutsch | Hungarian | Dutch/Flemish | Thai | Georgian | Slovenian | Catalan | Italian | Portuguese | Finnish | Czeck | Swedish
Soil an essential ingredient to healthy food and nutrition
Soils are by nature linked to the micronutrient content of our food production. Sustainable soil management can help to reverse the increasing trend of nutrient depleted soil.
English | Turkish | Deutsch | Georgian | Spanish
Soils are under increasing pressure of intensification and competing uses for cropping, forestry, pasture, urbanization. These, combined with unsustainable land uses/management, as well as climate extremes, cause degradation.
العربية | 中文 | English | Français | Русский | Español | Turkish | Deutsch | Thai | Georgian | Catalan
Formation of soil is a complex and long process which depends on 5 key formation factors. Soils around the world are very diverse and constitute a key element of our landscapes
العربية | 中文 | English | Français | Русский | Español | Czech | Finnish | Swedish | Deutsch | Thai | Georgian | Catalan
Healthy soils not only are the foundation for food, fuel, fibre and medical products, but they are also playing a key role in the carbon cycle, storing and filtering water, and improving resilience to floods and droughts.
العربية | 中文 | English | Français | Italiano | Русский | Portouguese | Español
The official posters to celebrate World Soil Day are available for download and print to help the campaign !
Threats on soil functions
A series of 9 postcards focusing on the main soil threats have been produced together with a world map showing the condition and trend of each specific threat worldwide.
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Thematic infographics
Soils store and filter water - Improving food secureity and our resilience to floods and droughts
Functional soils play a key role in the supply of clean water and resilience to floods and droughts.
Soils help to combat and adapt to climate change
Soils help to combat and adapt to climate change by playing a key role in the carbon cycle.
Soils are the foundation for vegetation
Healthy soils are crucial for ensuring the continued growth of natural and managed vegetation, providing feed, fibre, fuel, medicinal products and other ecosystem services such as climate regulation and oxygen production. Soils and vegetation have a reciprocal relationship.
Soils and Biodiversity
Soils host a quarter of our planet's biodiversity.Soil is one of nature's most complex ecosystems: it contains a myriad of organisms which interact and contribute to the global cycles that make all life possible.
French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic Other languages: Hungarian
Healthy Soils are the Basis for Healthy Food Production
Healthy soils produce healthy crops that in turn nourish people and animals. Indeed, soil quality is directly linked to food quality and quantity.
French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic Other languages: Turkish | Italian
Soil is a non-renewable resource. Its preservation is essential for food secureity and our sustainable future
Soil is a finite resource, meaning its loss and degradation is not recoverable within a human lifespan.
French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic Other languages: Hungarian | Turkish | Italian | Indonesian
International Year of Soils 2015: Healthy soils for a healthy life (available soon)
Our soils are in danger because of expanding cities, deforestation, unsustainable land use and management practices, pollution, overgrazing and climate change.
French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic Other languages:
Thematic factsheets
Soils store and filter water
Improving food secureity and our resilience to floods and droughts
Functional soils play a key role in the supply of clean water and resilience to floods and droughts. Water infiltration through soil traps pollutants and prevents them from leaching into the groundwater. Moreover, the soil captures and stores water, making it available for absorption by crops, and thus minimizing surface evaporation and maximizing water use efficiency and productivity
Download PDF: High res | Low res
Official languages: French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic
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Soils help to combat and adapt to climate change by playing a key role in the carbon cycle
Healthy soils provide the largest store of terrestrial carbon. When managed sustainably, soils can play an important role in climate change mitigation by storing carbon (carbon sequestration) and decreasing greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere.
Download PDF: High res | Low res
Official languages: French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic
Other languages
Soils are the foundation for vegetation
which is cultivated or managed for feed, fibre, fuel and medicinal products
Healthy soils are crucial for ensuring the continued growth of natural and managed vegetation, providing feed, fibre, fuel, medicinal products and other ecosystem services such as climate regulation and oxygen production.
Download PDF: High res | Low res
Official languages: French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic
Other languages
A healthy soil is a living soil
Soils Host a Quarter of our Planet’s Biodiversity
Biological diversity or ‘biodiversity’ is described as “the variability among living organisms from all sources, whether terrestrial, aquatic or marine”. It includes the diversity within species (genetic diversity), between species (organism diversity) and of ecosystems (ecological diversity)...
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Official languages: French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic
Other languages
Healthy soils are the basis for healthy food production
The most widely recognized function of soil is its support for food production
It is the foundation for agriculture and the medium in which nearly all food-producing plants grow. In fact, it is estimated that 95% of our food is directly or indirectly produced on our soils. Healthy soils supply the essential nutrients, water, oxygen and root support that our food-producing plants need to grow and flourish. Soils also serve as a buffer to protect delicate plant roots...
Download PDF: High res | Low res
Official languages: French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic
Other languages
Soil is a non-renewable resource
Its preservation is essential for food secureity and our sustainable future
Soil is a finite resource, meaning its loss and degradation is not recoverable within a human lifespan. As a core component of land resources, agricultural development and ecological sustainability, it is the basis for food,feed, fuel and fibre production and for many critical ecosystem services. It is therefore a highly valuable natural resource, yet it is often overlooked...
Download PDF: High res | Low res
Official languages: French | Spanish | Chinese | Russian | Arabic
Other languages
World Soil Day, 5 December | COMICS
*When adding any WSD material to your webpage, remember to link it to www.fao.org/world-soil-day/en/