Skip to content
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Indonesia
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Topics
  • News
  • Brief
  • Interview
  • Opinion
  • Figure
  • Infographic
  • Video
  • Community
  • Partner
  • Press Release
  • Youth
  • Global
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Our Very Body: A Documentary Film Advocates for Soil Restoration

“When soil dies, everything else dies with it, including us.”
by Kresentia Madina June 14, 2022
two kids in identical outfits holding a flag that says ‘Save Soil’

Photo by Save Soil/Conscious Planet

Soil is the foundation on which the lives on this planet are built. From food to shelter, our basic necessities revolve around soil one way or another. However, for such an integral part of life, soil deterioration due to climate change is often overlooked, even downright neglected.

Recently, a global movement called Save Soil launched a 30-minute documentary on soil degradation. The film explores the roots, impact, and necessary actions needed to tackle the crisis, featuring interviews with Sadhguru—the founder—and several award-winning scientists. 

There’s no soil without life

As much as 95% of our food comes from the soil, which is why fertile soil is necessary to produce nutritious food. The documentary opens by highlighting the importance of microorganisms in healthy soil.

“Good guy bacteria, good guy fungi, protozoa, nematodes, microarthropods, earthworms. All of those organisms are required to have good, healthy soil, so your plant gets the balance of everything that it needs every second of every day,” says Dr. Elaine Ingham, a microbiologist and the President of Soil Foodweb Inc.

A productive soil has 3-6% organic matter. However, over 62% of the soil in India currently has less than 0.5% organic content. Other parts of the world are also facing similar conditions. Sadhguru believes that the use of modern plowing machines is stripping the soil bare and exposing it to sunlight, which kills all microbial activities. From this, the documentary talks of desertification and soil extinction.

There’s no life without soil

When the very foundation of our lives is shaken, it will set a chain of disruption in every facet of our lives. From malnutrition to famine to migration, the film further exposes the impact of soil degradation.

Unhealthy soil leads to a lack of nutrients in our food. In the United States, the film cites, soil depletion causes the nutrient levels in fruit and vegetables to drop 20-40%. This leads to nutritional deficiencies in potassium, Vitamin E, Vitamin K, magnesium, and Vitamin A for much of the American population.

Furthermore, hunger remains one of the greatest challenges humanity has to solve. Suppose things escalate with no effort to save soil. In that case, it will get increasingly difficult for the future generation to put food on the table. It’s not too far-fetched to say that there will be civil wars in the name of food.

“You must understand that all human civilizations have been built only because of the fire of the belly, to fulfill this. The same fire which built human civilizations can burn the thing down if it is not quenched,” says Sadhguru.

People’s power to make a change

Right now, Save Soil’s primary goal is to bring a policy change in 192 countries that says that agricultural land must have a minimum of 3-6% organic matter to operate. Sadhguru believes that if we act now, we can make a reasonable level of change in 15 to 25 years. The power to create changes lies in the people, and it is our duty to keep advocating for soil.

“This is not about just painting a dark picture of everything. This is a moment of responsibility, that if we as human beings stand up right now, we can turn this around,” he adds.

Watch the full documentary here.

Editor: Nazalea Kusuma


Subscribe to Green Network Asia
Strengthen your personal and professional development with cross-sectoral insights on sustainability-related issues and sustainable development across the Asia Pacific and beyond.
Select Your Subscription Plan
Kresentia Madina
Kresentia Madina
Reporter at Green Network Asia | Website |  + postsBio

Madina is the Assistant Manager for Digital Publications at Green Network Asia. She graduated from Universitas Indonesia with a bachelor's degree in English Literature. She has three years of professional experience working on GNA international digital publications, programs, and partnerships particularly on social and cultural issues.

  • Kresentia Madina
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kresentiamadina/
    GRI’s Updated Sustainability Standards on Climate Change and Energy
  • Kresentia Madina
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kresentiamadina/
    Australian Climate Visa for Citizens of Tuvalu: Showcasing cross-border partnership in light of the climate crisis
  • Kresentia Madina
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kresentiamadina/
    A Worrying State of Insect Decline
  • Kresentia Madina
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/kresentiamadina/
    Australia Released a Sustainable Finance Taxonomy to Support Net-zero Transition

Continue Reading

Previous: India’s International Queer Film Festival is Back to Physical Screening
Next: A Survivor’s Story Becomes a Wakeup Call for Change on Nepal’s Rape Laws

Related Stories

A young man sits alone in a low light room, looking distressed while holding his phone. How the Manosphere Is Reshaping Young Men’s Identity
  • Brief
  • Featured

How the Manosphere Is Reshaping Young Men’s Identity

by Sukma Prasanthi July 7, 2025
Vegetable farming How Plant the Emirates Aims to Support Food Self-Sufficiency in the UAE
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

How Plant the Emirates Aims to Support Food Self-Sufficiency in the UAE

by Attiatul Noor July 4, 2025
figure of houses and pipes that emit smoke GRI’s Updated Sustainability Standards on Climate Change and Energy
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

GRI’s Updated Sustainability Standards on Climate Change and Energy

by Kresentia Madina July 3, 2025
Charcoal chip and charcoal ashes. Looking into Biochar as a Bioremediation Agent
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Looking into Biochar as a Bioremediation Agent

by Ayu Nabilah July 2, 2025
a tuvalu flag Australian Climate Visa for Citizens of Tuvalu: Showcasing cross-border partnership in light of the climate crisis
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Australian Climate Visa for Citizens of Tuvalu: Showcasing cross-border partnership in light of the climate crisis

by Kresentia Madina July 1, 2025
Small Islands in the middle of Raja Ampat seas Nickel Mining in Raja Ampat and the Widespread Cost of Natural Resource Exploitation
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Nickel Mining in Raja Ampat and the Widespread Cost of Natural Resource Exploitation

by Andi Batara June 30, 2025

About Us

  • GNA CEO’s Letter
  • GNA In-House Team
  • GNA Author Network
  • GNA Press Release Guidelines
  • GNA Op-ed Article Guidelines
  • GNA Community Content Guidelines
  • GNA Internship
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
© 2021-2025 Green Network Asia