NEW AGRICULTURE NEW GENERATION
NEW AGRICULTURE NEW GENERATION
3 Projects, page 1 of 1
Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2027Partners:ERATOSTHENES CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE, ELO ASBL, Π.Α.Μ.Θ, SGGW, University of Basilicata +18 partnersERATOSTHENES CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE,ELO ASBL,Π.Α.Μ.Θ,SGGW,University of Basilicata,REGIONE BASILICATA,TERRANIS,STICHTING METABOLIC INSTITUTE,OPenIG,WOJEWODZTWO MAZOWIECKIE,Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,NOA,European Rural Development Network,GISAIA,LAND MANAGEMENT INSTITUTE OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF AGRARIAN SCIENCES OF UKRAINE,WHITE RESEARCH SPRL,Kyiv Regional Council,Separated Subdivision of National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine Boyarka Forest Research Station,NEW AGRICULTURE NEW GENERATION,INTERBALKAN ENVIRONMENT CENTER,University of Rome Tor Vergata,Polytechnic University of Milan,EARSCFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101182007Overall Budget: 5,996,280 EURFunder Contribution: 5,996,280 EURLandShift is a groundbreaking initiative aimed at addressing the urgent challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, and unsustainable land management practices. With a focus on the EU's land-use sector, LandShift seeks to develop innovative solutions that not only mitigate biogenic emissions but also enhance ecosystem resilience and promote sustainable resource management. LandShift aims to support the EU's ambitious climate goals by maximizing net removals from LULUCF, while minimizing biogenic emissions from agriculture. By strategically utilizing Living Earths, integrating FAO LCCS with optimized EO data, and Data Cubes as centralized data hubs, the project aims to implement tailored strategies for local and regional contexts, fostering stakeholder engagement and collaboration. Central to LandShift's approach is the integration of NBS aligned with the principles of the New European Bauhaus. These solutions leverage natural processes and ecosystems to enhance carbon sequestration, improve biodiversity, and strengthen ecosystem services. By harnessing the power of NBS, LandShift aims to create synergies between climate mitigation, biodiversity conservation, and sustainable land management. Furthermore, LandShift recognizes the importance of data-driven decision-making and monitoring to track progress and inform policy development. The project will establish robust MRV systems to ensure the effectiveness of implemented strategies and measure their impact on biogenic emissions, biodiversity, and ecosystem health. In addition to technical solutions, LandShift places a strong emphasis on policy influence and capacity building. Through targeted outreach and engagement activities, the project aims to raise awareness, build capacity, and foster collaboration among stakeholders at all levels. By empowering policymakers, land managers, and local communities, LandShift seeks to create an enabling environment for sustainable land use sector and management practices.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2028Partners:CSIC, UCSC, FUNDACION GRUPO CAJAMAR, UNIVERSITY OF THESSALY - UTH, Zabala Innovation Consulting (Spain) +30 partnersCSIC,UCSC,FUNDACION GRUPO CAJAMAR,UNIVERSITY OF THESSALY - UTH,Zabala Innovation Consulting (Spain),DIADYMA SA,RISE,CLUBE,Greenovate! Europe,EUSKAMPUS FUNDAZIOA,COMUNE DI OPPEANO,CSCP,UPM,ISINNOVA,INSTITUTE FOR FOOD STUDIES& AGROINDUSTRIAL DEV,SLU,AGRICULTURAL UNIVERSITY PLOVDIV,GAIA,RUMA,University of Trento,CONSORZIO PER LA TUTELA DEL FRANCIACORTA,NEW AGRICULTURE NEW GENERATION,IMIDA,CETENMA,HS KONSULT AB,UNIMI,AGROWINGDATA,IGLESIA CATOLICA DIOCESIS DE BILBAO ARCHIVO DIOCESANO ARCHIVO HISTORICO ECLESIASTICO DE BIZKAIA,ESKILARA,Polytechnic University of Milan,INNOVHUB S,INNOVATEKBI KREA SOCIEDAD LIMITADA,LEIBNIZ-INSTITUT FUER AGRARTECHNIK POTSDAM-BORNIM EV (ATB),MINCIOPARK,AYUNTAMIENTODE FORUA FORUKO UDALAFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101157394Overall Budget: 11,999,900 EURFunder Contribution: 11,999,900 EUREuropean soils face pressing conditions for their health. An alarming 60-70% of EU soils are considered unhealthy, attributed to factors such as pollution, urbanization, and intensive agriculture, further exacerbated by climate change. This degradation results in economic, societal, and environmental repercussions, including decreased land productivity, migration, land abandonment, and biodiversity loss. Addressing this challenge necessitates holistic measures, especially since soil restoration can take centuries. The project initiative, aligning with various EU policies, emphasizes the importance of comprehensive soil restoration efforts. It plans to establish six Soil Health Living Labs (SHELLs) across diverse EU climatic zones, including Sweden, Spain, Spain-France, Italy, Greece, and Bulgaria. These labs are envisioned as innovation hubs, tailored to address the EU's specific soil health objectives, notably objectives 4, 6, and 8. Through collaborative efforts within these SHELLs, the goal is to develop, test, and validate potential solutions, ensuring scalability beyond their immediate regions. iCOSHELLs places a strong emphasis on inclusive stakeholder engagement, from researchers to landowners. Its systematic approach includes building stakeholder capacities, bridging gaps between science and practical applications, deepening understanding of soil indicators, replicating effective soil recovery methods, and championing supportive soil health policies. Additionally, iCOSHELLs seeks to redefine the concept of Living Labs (LLs). Challenging the traditional model, which often revolves around isolated research entities, iCOSHELLs envisions LLs rooted in co-creation, broad engagement, and real-world application. This transformative vision aims to evolve existing SHELLs into standardized, widely recognized labs, setting a foundational blueprint for future LLs. Moreover, as a comprehensive soil data repository, iCOSHELLs promotes collaboration, ensuring replicable.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2028Partners:SAN CRISPIN SOCIEDAD COOPERATIVA DE CONSUMO, CSIC, P.KATSAVELLIS-A.KOTTIKA-I.FLORIDIS OE, UPM, REGION OF NORTH AEGEAN +31 partnersSAN CRISPIN SOCIEDAD COOPERATIVA DE CONSUMO,CSIC,P.KATSAVELLIS-A.KOTTIKA-I.FLORIDIS OE,UPM,REGION OF NORTH AEGEAN,VESELA TANASKOVIC GASSNER PREDUZETNIK ISTRAZIVANJE I RAZVOJ U PRIRODNIM I TEHINCKO-TEHNOLOSKIM NAUKA,UoA,Comunidad de Madrid,FALCON AEBE,ASSOCIACIO REVOLVE MEDITERRANEO,ASOCIACION ALVELAL,AKEP,AGRICULTURAL OLIVE COOPERATIVE OF DOLIANA,GRUP BALEAR D'ORNITOLOGIA I DEFENSA DE LA NATURALESA,MYTILENE S.A,UV,HABITAT AOVE S.C.A,CRISTIAN,AGROSAP,STICHTING METABOLIC VENTURES,FIBL FRANCE,SOLAGRO ASSOCIATION,AGRICULTURAL COOPERATIVE OF XANTHI,ESFERICO MRV SYSTEMS SL,NEW AGRICULTURE NEW GENERATION,CHAMBRE D'AGRICULTURE DU LOIRET,AYUNTAMIENTO DE CHIRIVEL,VEREIN ZUR FORDERUNG DER BEGRUNUNG VON WUSTENLANDSCHAFTEN - AFFOREST4FUTURE,THE MERAKI PEOPLE,KALAMPOKA KONSTANTINA,CC DU VAL DE DROME EN BIOVALLE,ALMENDREHESA SOCIEDAD LIMITADA,CENTIC,GRAB,HELLENIC AGRICULTURAL ORGANIZATION - DEMETER,FUNDACIÓN ALANDFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101157865Overall Budget: 11,953,200 EURFunder Contribution: 11,953,100 EURIn the EU, 60-70% of soils are degraded as a direct result of unsustainable management. However, tackling this multifaceted challenge is not an easy task, mainly because farmers' decisions are influenced by a wide range of factors, making it difficult to define regenerative soil management practices that are simultaneously effective, economical, have demonstrable yield benefits and are easy to implement. In this context, the goal is to foster a collective awareness, at the the level of five Mediterranean regions, that soils and humans must be understood as social-ecological systems and that no organisation/solution alone is capable of sustainably transforming the system. The desired change can only emerge when the innovation process is supported by an exploration phase enabling actors to identify their personal (from individuals to organisations) drivers, ultimately aligning purposes and behaviours toward impactful collective actions. To demonstrate this, the project will apply co-creation tools to multi-actor governance structures, emphasising the building up of a shared awareness of soil threats over the identification of specific technologies. The main objectives of the proposed plan are: 1) to explore regional needs and drivers, and to validate governance models for operating multi-actor co-creation processes; 2) to establish a network of five agro-innovation hubs sustained by underlying business models; 3) to define harmonised regional baselines for 7 out of the 8 indicators found in the Soil Mission Implementation plan; 4) to kick-start the multi-actor co-design and validation of solutions for soil health that are practical and scalable; 5) to facilitate the diffusion of innovation through a plethora of communication and dissemination actions. GOV4ALL concentrates on 3 Mediterranean pedo-climatic zones, where the hubs will serve as sustainable innovation centres, aiding the Soil Mission's objectives and inspiring soil regeneration regionally and beyond.
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