The European Innovation Partnership (EIP) „Agricultural ... · Health and Consumers The European...

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Health and Consumers The European Innovation Partnership (EIP) „Agricultural Productivity and Sustainability“ Speeding up innovation EUFRAS conference – Warsaw – 21 February 2018 Inge Van Oost - DG Agriculture and Rural Development

Transcript of The European Innovation Partnership (EIP) „Agricultural ... · Health and Consumers The European...

Health and Consumers

The European Innovation Partnership (EIP) „Agricultural Productivity and Sustainability“

Speeding up innovation

EUFRAS conference – Warsaw – 21 February 2018

Inge Van Oost - DG Agriculture and Rural Development

Health and Consumers

1. The bigger picture of EIP-AGRI

• 2010: European Innovation Partnerships want to speed up

innovation through collaboration and linking policies and

instruments: IMPACT!!!

• The EIP-AGRI was launched by DG AGRI in 2012: COM (2012)79

• The EIP-AGRI applies an overarching "Open innovation" concept

based on the interactive innovation model (applied in CAP

Operational Groups and H2020 Multi-Actor projects):

Collaboration between various actors to make best use of

complementary types of knowledge (scientific, practical,

organisational, etc) in view of co-creation and diffusion of

solutions/opportunities ready to implement in practice.

• EU wide EIP network linking actors: communication, partnering, dissemination, knowledge flows and collecting practice needs (Open science)

* In line with the main recommendation of the 2015 Milan Scientific Committee on impact: 'more research into practice'

The EIP-AGRI in short

Triple Systems approach

"I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow" Woodrow Wilson – President of the USA, 1913-1921

Health and Consumers

• Funding for setting up of an “Operational Group“ (OG) : farmers, advisors, agribusiness, researchers, NGOs, etc) planning an innovation project (Art 35)

• Project funding for the Operational Group’s project (Art 35).

• Supporting innovation support services

• Research projects, to provide the knowledge base for innovative actions

• Interactive innovation formats: multi-actor projects and thematic networks genuinely involving farmers, advisors, entreprises, etc…. "all along the project"

eip-agri

Funding for interactive innovation projects

EIP networks MS/regions

Involvement of OGs is strongly recommended

Unique EU repository of contacts and

practice abstracts

Rural Development (regional/national level)

Horizon 2020 (European projects)

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EU added value : An EU wide EIP network, supported under Rural development policy Linking with H2020

Operational Group (OG)

National Rural Network (NRN)

Multi-actor project (MA)

Thematic Network (TN)

“The next big thing will be a lot of small

things"

21 September 2016 (Thomas Lommee)

2. EIP-AGRI's

Rural Development side

What is an Operational Group (OG) ?

• EIP operational groups funded under rural development programmes are multi-actor, project based and tackle a certain practical problem or opportunity which may lead to an innovation

• The operational group is tailored to this problem/opportunity and makes the best use of different types of knowledge (practical, scientific, technical, organisational, etc) in an interactive way.

• The operational group is composed of those key actors (farmers, advisors, researchers, businesses, NGOs etc) which are in the best position to realize the project's goals and to

share experiences broadly.

Du choc des idées jaillit la lumière Nicolas Boileau, french philosopher, 17th century

> Enlightenment comes when views collide > From the clash of opposing minds, new ideas arise

Interactive innovation: Cross-fertilisation is key for tackling complex challenges and developing opportunities for innovation

EIP Operational Groups 2014-2020

• The EIP implementation aims at a flexible and open system for the creation of a multiplicity of operational groups (OGs)

• 27 MS and 98 RDPs are implementing the EIP in their 2014-2020 Rural Development programmes with regular calls for Operational Group projects during this period

• 3200 OGs planned in 2014-2020, with cooperation in innovative activities such as the development of new products or practices, pilot projects, supply chain cooperation, environmental projects or climate change actions, cooperation in biomass provision or renewable energy, forest management and much more

• EIP provides unique opportunity for better cooperation projects thanks to attention for supporting environment and through the (possible) funding of the preparation process of a project

The first OGs were set up in 2016 ... Some examples:

• ValorInVitis – using indigenous varieties and increasing the resilience of production systems to climate change (IT-ER)

• Pig health – reducing the use of antibiotics (DE-NS)

• Robust lamb in Pyrénées (France)

• Winter harvest: seasonal, energy extensive and innovative vegetable production (Austria)

• Establishing a sustainable and environment friendly wheat value chain (Germany)

• FruitNet - control of Monilinia spp. in stone fruits (Spain)

• Aquaponics: nutrients from fish for plant growth (DE – MV)

• Organic dock control in grasslands (Austria)

• Zero herbicides in Mediterranean perennial crops (France)

http://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/content/eip-agri-workshop-operational-groups-first-experiences

https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/og_booklet_eip-agri_sem-athens-2017_en.pdf

Thematic EIP workshops starting: 500 to 700 OG projects are being connected with other OGs and H2020

(since 2017)... Some examples:

• EIP-AGRI workshop for organic OGs and MA projects "Organic is operational" (June 2017):

https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/ws-oio-2017-projects_document_en.pdf

• EIP-AGRI Workshop: "Innovation in the supply chain: creating value together" (Feb 2018)

44 OGs and 9 MA H2020 project networking on New business models and new ways of organising the supply chain, New products and processes

https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/event/eip-agri-workshop-innovation-supply-chain-creating

• Various initiatives (events) being taken by MS and H2020 thematic networks to connect OGs: DE, HU, SI, EL, Sheepnet, Eurodairy, etc (some examples in subgroup innovation 22 Feb 2018)

OG projects: first indications

In terms of scope:

Top 5

• Plant protection

• Precision farming

• Agro-environment

• New supply chains

• Organic farming

N.B. Initial clustering analysis covering 231 OGs – Oct 2016. New clustering starting now (Feb 2018)

Company selling

bacteria products

A farmer

Innovation support centre

Researchers VITO (environm)

ILVO (agric)

Ammonia reducing pig stable

group

Project objective: develop a pig stable reducing ammonia emissions by 50 % in a more cost-efficient way than existing stable systems (idea from a farmer, brokered by the Innovation Support Centre)

Examples of an Innovation Support Service:

one to one brokering function

Innovation Support Services emerging:

• Innovation advice and promotion

• Coaching farmers towards innovation (Innovation Prize)

• Brainstorming events and animation

• Brokering function (building a project)

• Coordination and facilitation of projects as an intermediate between partners

• Dissemination of innovative results

• Connect with SME and other innovation services and funding

3. EIP-AGRI's

H2020 research and innovation side

The two most important principles are:

• to focus on end-users’ problems/opportunities and develop innovative solutions which cover real needs. End-users like farmers, foresters or businesses will be more motivated to use the project results, because they were incorporated in generating them and therefore feel "co-ownership"

• to bring together the most relevant partners with the needed complementary type of knowledge which helps solving problems and tackling opportunities e.g.: farmers, advisors, researchers, suppliers, processors, agencies and/or other actors, who co-operate and co-innovate in project activities from the beginning till the end.

Detailed requirements in H2020 WP introduction p. 9

http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/wp/2018-2020/main/h2020-wp1820-food_en.pdf

H2020 Multi-actor approach - Key elements

EU research and innovation projects

• Multi-actor coordination action: Partners should summarise, share and present existing scientific knowledge & best practices that are not sufficiently known (and applied) by practitioners , in an easy understandable concise way ready for practice

• Themes to be chosen bottom-up, contributing to a more competitive sustainable agriculture and forestry

• Themes must focus on the most urgent needs of agricultural or forestry production sectors,

• Projects involving the actors relevant for the chose theme (e.g. researchers, farmers, advisors, enterprises, education, NGOs, administration, regulatory bodies, EIP project groups…) (Many EU 13 involved)

H2020 Thematic networks : Compiling knowledge ready for practice

RUR 10 - 2016 CERERE Cereals: organic/low input cereal food systems for biodiversity and quality (production, processing, marketing)

RUR 10 - 2016 Eu PiG Pig husbandry: health management, precision production, welfare and meat quality

RUR 10 - 2016 Inno4Grass Productive grasslands: profitability and environmental services

RUR 10 - 2016 SheepNet Improving sheep productivity

ISIB 2 - 2014 Winetwork Wine diseases: Grapevine Trunk Disease and Flavescence dorée

ISIB 2 - 2014 OKNetArable Organic agriculture - arable crops

ISIB 2 - 2014 Hennovation Animal welfare hens

ISIB 2 - 2015 4D4F Data and sensor driven decision making on dairy farms

ISIB 2 - 2015 EuroDairy Practice-based innovations in dairy farming: resource efficiency, Biodiversity, Animal care, and Socio-economic resilience

ISIB 2 - 2015 EUFRUIT Fruit: cultivar development, minimize residues, storage and fruit quality, sustainability of production systems

22 H2020 bottom-up Thematic Networks so far (1)

calls 2014-2016 – a complementary set of themes (sectors)

RUR 10 - 2016 SKIN Stimulating innovation and good practices in short supply chains

RUR 10 - 2016 AFINET Agroforestry: sylvoarable and sylvopastural systems' design, management and profitability

ISIB 2 - 2014 Agri-Spin Innovation brokering methods

ISIB 2 - 2015 AGRIFORVALO

R Valorization of biomass side-streams from agriculture and forest

ISIB 2 - 2015 Smart-AKIS Smart Farming Technology: Management Information Systems, Precision Agriculture and Agriculture automation and robotics

ISIB 2 - 2015 HNV-Link Support HNV farmlands through knowledge and innovation

WATER 4B - 2015

FERTINNOWA Optimize water and nutrient use efficiency: dbase on innovative technologies and practices for fertigation of horticultural crops

22 H2020 bottom-up Thematic Networks so far (2)

a complementary set of themes (cross-cutting themes)

A short film explaining how a thematic network works: https://youtu.be/mVsW4--ex0M

2017 H2020 bottom-up Thematic Networks (3)

another complementary set of themes

(cross-cutting themes)

ENABLING Upscaling biomass production and pre-processing for bio-based value chains

INCREdible Non Wood Forest Products: Cork, Resins and Edibles in the Mediterranean basin

NEWBIE New Entrant netWork: Business models for Innovation, entrepreneurship and resilience

OK-Net EcoFeed

Organic Knowledge Network on Monogastric Animal Feed (pigs, broilers, hens)

PANACEA Non-food Crops’ penetration path

1 bio Euro H2020 Multi-actor projects in total in 7 years: WPs 2014-2017: 500 mio Euro – 80 Multi-actor projects

WP 2018-2020: More multi-actor topics/projects in Horizon 2020 500 mio Euro – another 100 MA projects (incl TNs)

Conclusions:

• The EIP is a unique funding for innovative opportunities, highly appreciated also, because of bottom-up + coverage of real needs/opportunities

• This is demonstrated by the vast majority of Member States having prioritised and programmed this new and voluntary measure

• The EIP flexibility allows it to be shaped to widely different circumstances and innovation infrastructure, tackling the gap between research and practice

• Where EIP networks and National Rural Networks have been active in MS, they have strongly promoted the EIP

Recommendations:

• Avoid watering down EIP’s distinctive practical bottom-up approach

• Enable advance payments and innovation support services

• Create further networking, multiplication and linkages generating extra EU added value => connecting and widening EU AKIS (e.g. cross-visits, …)

“What stops us is the fear of change. And nevertheless, it is on change that our salvation depends”

Jean Monnet Father of Europe

Speech on 12/05/1954

“Ce qui nous arrête, c’est la peur du changement. Et pourtant c’est du changement que dépend notre salut”

Calls for Operational Groups (OG) (informal state of play 25 January 2018)

1st call

now

open

OG projects

finished,

selected

and/or being

evaluated

1st call to

open soon

4. Future of the EIP-AGRI:

What do we have and where do we go?

EIP evaluation study:

a) https://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/sites/agriculture/files/external-studies/2016/eip-2016/eval_en.pdf

SWG SCAR-AKIS Policy Brief on the Future of Advisory Services:

on advisor's competences, interconnections and future more interactive roles, etc

a) https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/policy_brief_on_the_future_of_advisory_services_scar_akis_06102017.pdf

PROAKIS Study:

a) www.proakis.eu

Characterising MS' AKIS

An overview of MS' AKISs (PROAKIS, as of 2014):

fragmented or integrated, strong or weak

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CAP post 2020 Communication "The future of food and farming": involves also the future for AKISs

“The European Innovation Partnership for Agricultural Productivity and Sustainability (EIP-AGRI) and the European Innovation Partnership on Water have proven their value in mobilising the agricultural sector for innovation. It has funded multi-participant pilot projects and is networking across Europe to make new knowledge generally available. Its success depends on the combined performance of advisors, agricultural training and educational systems, researchers and farmer organisations often referred to as the Agricultural Knowledge and Innovation System (AKIS) which operates very differently from one Member States to another. The role of the farm advisor stands out as particularly important. A modern CAP should support the strengthening of farm advisory services within the AKIS systems. This should become a condition for the approval of CAP Strategic plans.”

Read the Communication: https://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/sites/agriculture/files/future-of-cap/future_of_food_and_farming_communication_en.pdf

CAP post 2020 Communication – The future of food and farming – Clarification memo on AKISs (1)

“Why does the CAP need to support innovation? What is the rationale?

Agriculture and our rural areas face a number of challenges for which new solutions need to be found. We need better advice and more innovation. Public involvement in research and innovation is necessary to bridge the gap between rural areas in demand of digital innovations and better connectivity and providers of new technologies.

It makes sense to cooperate on research an innovation at EU level. By learning from each other in different parts of the EU we will develop better knowledge and will adopt innovation faster.

Read the Memo:

http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-17-4842_en.htm

CAP post 2020 Communication – The future of food and farming – Clarification memo on AKIS (2)

“How will this new approach function in practice?”

The Union should set the basic policy parameters based on the objectives of the CAP, …the already agreed objectives and targets on for instance the environment, climate change (COP 21), and a number of sustainable development goals.

Each Member State should establish a "CAP strategic plan", which would cover interventions in both pillar I and pillar II. This plan will tailor CAP interventions to maximise their contribution to EU objectives taking better into account local conditions and needs, against such objectives and targets. At the same time, Member States would also have a greater say in designing the compliance and control framework applicable to beneficiaries (including controls and penalties).

….

CAP post 2020 Communication – The future of food and farming – Clarification memo on AKIS (3)

“How will this new approach function in practice?”

(continued)

These strategic plans would be prepared not in isolation but in the framework of a structured process and the Commission would assess and approve such plans. This would maximise the contribution of the CAP towards the EU priorities and objectives and the achievement of Member States' climate and energy targets. It would also enhance the EU added value and preserve a functioning agricultural internal market.

While Member States should bear greater responsibility and be more accountable as to how they meet the objectives and achieve agreed targets, the new approach will continue to ensure a level playing field, preserving the common nature and the two pillars of the policy. http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-17-4842_en.htm

CAP post 2020 Communication – The future of food and farming – Clarification memo on AKIS (4)

“How will the future CAP support farmers in protecting the environment?” (+ young farmers etc)

As a foundation, farmers receiving income support from the CAP will have to apply various environment- and climate-friendly practices. Member States will determine the detail of these - in line with the need to meet EU-level objectives but also taking into account national, regional and local circumstances.

Eco-friendly action which goes beyond this foundational level of good practice will be supported through schemes which are voluntary for farmers - at a relatively basic level, and above that more advanced schemes.

The CAP will also place strong emphasis on unlocking the potential of research, innovation, training and the use of advice to improve care for the environment and climate, including through greater resource (as in Baltic Deal etc)

CAP post 2020 – The future of food and farming – involves also the future for AKIS

• The rationale for these sentences is that the efficiency and effectiveness of advisory services can best be upgraded by improving their connections within the Agricultural Knowledge and Innovation Systems and sharing knowledge and innovative applications more intensively.

• (See SWG SCAR-AKIS Policy Brief on the Future of Advisory services on advisor's future interactive competences, interconnections and roles) https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/policy_brief_on_the_future_of_advisory_services_scar_akis_06102017.pdf

• To perform such an upgrade of advisory services, a transition period is needed. Such a transition AKIS plan will form a part of the CAP Strategic Plans to be approved.

CAP Strategic AKIS plans (cross-fertilisation in SWG SCAR-AKIS ongoing)

Incentivising creativity by structuring

knowledge flows between key

actors

CAP post 2020

CAP post 2020 – The future of food and farming – 3 key actors in strengthened AKIS with stronger knowledge flows in and between MSs:

• (1) Advisors (broad concept but independent of commercial interests) – often closest to farmers, bring in and funnel needs from farmers/end-users and communicate back to them. Could also be repres. of ngos, farmers’ org etc

2. Many kinds of people are so-called “advisor”. What should be the criteria for being considered an advisor?

2.1. Impartial, having the competence and means to enhance the ability to change

Advice comes from an individual advisor, which may belong to an entity (private or public/small or big), with a conscious ambition to intervene so that the customer (broadly defined) improves his/her ability to change. The purpose is communication and an intervention in order to support change. This is only possible if the advisor has the competence and the means (f.i. financial resources) to do it. The advisor should be impartial and not promoting a specific product or technology.

One definition of extension/advisory services is that advisory services are 'conscious interventions in order to create better preconditions for change, carried through by an entity having the means and competence to do it'. Farmers may receive substantial and often valuable information from companies in the context of their commercial objectives. However, farmers need to be enabled to receive independent “advice” that is not part of a “product service” package.

https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/policy_brief_on_the_future_of_advisory_services_scar_akis_06102017.pdf

• (2) Researchers (broad concept but with a focus on impact on end-users) – bring in local/national science & networks (At EU level DG AGRI will continue research efforts under FP9)

(3) Networks (again broad) reinforcing MS AKIS, and connecting with EU level AKIS - EIP/rural network):

• Rural networks at national levels, local at regional levels

• Thematic networks at national/regional/EU

• Etc…?

Bringing in and translating info from EU and other countries (in particular innovation projects OGs, MA, TN etc) and returning info from MS to EU to other MS

CAP post 2020 – The future of food and farming – 3 key actors in strengthened AKIS with stronger knowledge flows:

Examples of recent evolutions of strengthened AKIS, often induced by the EIP funding

• Poland EIP network: A+N

• Hungary AKIS: R+A

• Ireland: R+A

• Slovakia: N + A

• France: R + A + N

• Wales Innovation Hub (EIP seminar May 2017):R+A

• Scotland Nov 2017 Innovation support service : R+A

• Etc…

(Further brainstorming in SWG SCAR-AKIS)

Strengthening AKISs – Inspiration?

"The value of an idea lies in the using of it."

Thomas Alva Edison – inventor of the light bulb

Having potential innovative knowledge is one thing, turning it into reality is another.

Building an EU AKIS

Speed up creativity and practice application

Better connectivity and quicker circulation of

information

Innovation is: an idea put into practice with success !

Engage in a better connected European AKIS:

To an „Agriculture of Knowledge“ …..

Thank you for your attention!

[email protected]

www.eip-agri.eu

• EIP brochure on multi-actor projects: NEW

• https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/eip-

agri_brochure_multi-actor_projects_2017_en_web.pdf

• EIP brochure on thematic networks & practice abstracts

• http://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/sites/agri-eip/files/eip-

agri_brochure_thematic_networks_2016_en_web.pdf

• EIP common format for practice abstracts

• https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/en/content/eip-agri-common-

format

• Videostreamed seminar on drafting practice abstracts:

• http://www.ncp-biohorizon.net/events?cmd=showDetail&id=33

• Links to NRNs: National Rural Networks can help in partner search

between H2020 consortia and EIP Operational Groups

• http://enrd.ec.europa.eu/enrd-static/networks-and-

networking/nrn-information/en/nrn-information_en.html

Where can you find more info?

a) More info on Multi-actor projects under Horizon 2020

a) https://ec.europa.eu/eip/agriculture/en/publications/eip-agri-brochure-horizon-2020-multi-actor : brochure with basics and examples

b) http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/wp/2018-2020/main/h2020-wp1820-food_en.pdf page 9 Multi-actor requirements

Workshop "Interactive innovation in motion: multi-actor projects and thematic networks under Horizon 2020" 24/11/2015:

Event page: https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/en/news/interactive-innovation-motion-multi-actor-projects-and-thematic-networks-under-horizon-2020

Videostreamed presentation on Multi-actor approach and Thematic Networks in call 2016: (from 0:53:00 till 01:47:00)

https://scic.ec.europa.eu/streaming/workshop-on-multi-actor-approach-and-thematic-networks-under-horizon-2020 Basic info + questions & answers

How to build a successful Horizon 2020 multi-actor project?

How to build a successful Horizon 2020 multi-actor project?

How to build a successful Horizon 2020 multi-actor project?

How to build a successful Horizon 2020 multi-actor project?

Agriculture R&I conference, Brussels, 26-28 January 2016 https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/en/designing-path-conference-eu-agricultural-ri-videos-presentations-and-outcomes

Field experiments conducted in „real life“

situations working directly with farmers

e.g. linked TP => cross-fertilisation

of knowledge/ideas

Photos from on-going

experiments in Croatia,

France, Slovenia

Each partner (academia or non-academia) with a clear and visible role in

the project i.e. various actors (e.g. farmers) involved from work planning to

dissemination, demonstration

TREASURE, a Horizon 2020 multi-actor project on traditional resources for agricultural diversity and the food chain

Marjeta Čandek-Potokar KIS (Agricultural Institute of Slovenia)

• Short and easily understandable title (one key sentence, max 150 char.)

• Short innovative info in easily understandable language (max 1500 char.) ='practice abstracts':

• What problem will the knowledge generated solve for the end-user? What will be the main benefits to the practitioner?

• Main outcome/recommendation (2-3 main results)

• Contact data: Project coordinator (+ address, e-mail, telephone), text editor, project partners (+ address, e-mail, telephone), geographical location, project period, funding source & budget, link to project website and to a website where info stays long-term available

What info is to be shared through the EIP common format for practitioners?

An example of a practice abstract from Fertinnowa Application of zeolite to reduce nitrates concentration in growing media and soil

Areas like the Albenga plain in Liguria Region (Italy) are classified as “areas vulnerable to

nitrates” and are under specific legislation to limit nitrate contamination of superficial and

deep water bodies.

The addition of zeolite to the source of nitrogen can improve the nitrogen use efficiency

and reduce the environmental impact caused by nitrates leaching. Thanks to the specific atomic

structure of clinoptilolite (a kind of zeolite) nitrifying bacteria are stopped from entering the

tiny pores of the clinoptilolite. The ammonium is held internally on the cation-exchange sites

and is not likely to be leached out easily as water passes through. As a consequence,

nitrification and thus nitrate leaching is reduced. Secondly, zeolites improve nitrogen use

efficiency because they act as a medium that slowly releases fertilisers.

Trials in the Albenga area have demonstrated that the addition of zeolite to the soil substrate

both in open field (vegetables) and in greenhouse (ornamentals) lead to a reduction of nitrates

concentration in the substrate.

For the best result, add clinoptilolite at a rate of 3% weight/weight when preparing the

substrate for crop cultivation:

• for potted plants: mixed in the peat based substrate (normally added with slow

release fertiliser);

• for open field cultivation: mixed in the first 20-30 cm of soil through tillage.

1.b) EIP Workprogramme Sep-Dec 2017 networking activities

• Focus Groups (finished or running): state of play

• Agri Innovation Summit Lisbon 11-12 Oct

• Workshop “Innovation in the supply chain:

Creating value together”

• Website development, including for OG and MA

projects

EIP-AGRI Focus Group State of play

1 Organic farming – Optimising arable yields Final report

Factsheet

Brochure

2 Protein crops Final report

Brochure

3 Animal husbandry - Reducing antibiotic

use in pig farming

Final report

Brochure

4 Genetic resources – Cooperation models Final report

Factsheet

Brochure

5 Soil organic matter content in

Mediterranean regions

Final report

Factsheet

Brochure*

6 IPM for Brassica Final report

Brochure

7 High Nature Value – Farming profitability Final report

Factsheet

8 Mainstreaming precision farming Final report

Factsheet

9 Profitability of permanent grassland Final report

Factsheet

10 Fertiliser efficiency – Focus on

horticulture in open field

Final report

Factsheet

11 Optimising profitability of crop production

through Ecological Focus Areas

Final report

Factsheet

12 Innovative short food supply chain

management

Final report

Factsheet

* The brochure ‘Soil organic matter matters’ covers topics from the ‘Soil organic matter’ and the ‘Soil-borne diseases’ Focus Groups.

EIP-AGRI Focus Group State of play

13 IPM practices for soil-borne diseases Final report

Factsheet

Brochure*

14 New entrants into farming Final report

Factsheets

15 Water & agriculture Final report

Factsheet

Brochure

16 Mixed farming systems: Livestock/cash crops Final report

Factsheet

17 Benchmarking farm productivity and

sustainability performance

Final report

Factsheet

18 Livestock emissions – Reducing emissions

from cattle farming

Final report

Factsheet

19 Nutrient recycling Ongoing

2nd meeting held

20 Sustainable mobilisation of forest biomass Ongoing

2nd meeting held

21 Robust and resilient dairy production systems Ongoing

2nd meeting held

22 Agroforestry: introducing woody vegetation

into specialised crop and livestock systems

Ongoing

2nd meeting held

23 Diseases and Pests in Viticulture Ongoing

2nd meeting held

EIP-AGRI Focus Group 2017 State of play

24 New forest practices and tools for adaptation

and mitigation of climate change

Ongoing

2nd meeting held

25 Grazing for carbon Ongoing

2nd meeting held

26 Moving from source to sink in arable

farming

First meeting

November 2017

27 Circular Horticulture First meeting

November 2017

28 Enhancing production and use of renewable

energy on the farm

First meeting

November 2017

My EIP AGRI: tailored information at your fingertips

More Operational Group examples A selection of OG projects presented at past EIP-GRI events

2014

Precision Farming Focus Group

2015

October WP 2016-2017: IoT FA: Smart Farming and Food Security

2016

June Seminar "Data driven business models"

September Workshop: "Digitising the agri-food sector"

EIP-AGRI

Uptake

New technologies

Impacts

Benchmarking Focus Group

2017

April Workshop "Data Sharing"

Publication WP 2018-2020

June Seminar "Digital Innovation Hubs: mainstreaming digital agriculture"

November "H2020 Digitisation Day"

EIP-AGRI

Uptake

New technologies

Impacts

October Lisbon innovation Summit

IoF2020 –Internet of Food 2020 project

2018

Uptake

RUR-13-2018 - Enabling the farm advisor community to

prepare farmers for the

digital age

Technology Development

*DT-RUR-12-2018 - Digital

Innovation Hubs for

Agriculture

RUR-14-2018 -Digital solutions and e-tools to modernise the

CAP

**DT-ICT-08-2019 - Agricultural digital integration

platforms

**DT-ICT-09-2020 - Digital

service platforms for rural

economies

Impact

RUR-02-2018 - Socio-

economic impacts of

digitisation of agriculture and

rural areas

* ICT: Topics published under "Information and Communication Technologies" Work Programme

* DT: Topics contributing to the Focus Area "Digitising and transforming European industry and services"

• + SFS and BG topics contributing to the Focus Area "Digitising and transforming EU industry and services: DT-SFS-14-2018, DT-SFS-26-2019, DT-BG-04-2018-2019

RUR 2 RUR 12 RUR 13 RUR 14

Horizon 2020 Workprogramme 2018-2020