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Setting The Agenda For Food Security In Europe
Paris, France (SPX) Mar 14, 2006 The European Science Foundation has recently accepted a proposal for a new Forward Look that aims to create a broad research agenda focusing on all aspects of food systems. The objective is to address vital health and environmental issues, such as food security and sustainable development, primarily at a European level but also from a global perspective. The leading scientists behind this Forward Look, entitled �European Food Systems in a Changing World', hope that this study will act as a catalyst for the creation of scientific networks throughout all areas of food research. The ultimate aim is to create a self-evolving scientific agenda that will be progressively more equipped to take on major future challenges. European food systems are changing, driven by complex technological and policy factors. Globalising trends have accompanied these changes in recent decades. For example, technological advances have changed peoples' diet through the provision of a greater range of �convenience' or 'fast foods'. Environmental regulations have altered the conditions for the farming and fishing industries and increased public awareness has created consumer pressure in many areas including food safety and animal welfare. The food systems landscape will be profoundly altered by all of these changes. This Forward Look is the first attempt to outline what the effects of these changes will be. Through a broader understanding of the different driving forces within food systems this project will aim to deliver a research agenda which can provide additional clarity in these complex matters. The challenges that lie within European food systems are no longer only manifested through the provision of safe and healthy food. In a wider context they also strongly influence an increasing number of environmental and societal goals. A broad interdisciplinary approach, indicating a wider scope of implications throughout society, is therefore essential if we are to fully understand what can be achieved and how. Dr Rudy Rabbinge, a main contributor and a driving force behind this project, commented: "The collaboration between various disciplines will result in unifying concepts, unifying methodologies, unifying approaches. This may lead to true interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary research with much added value". The accomplishment of the objectives set out in this Forward Look will eventually aim to provide policymakers with the required tools to establish a more equitable balance of food security within European societies. Dr Rudy Rabbinge is clear in stating his life long commitment to research in this area: "I have been working all my life, through research; training and education, on the improvement of agricultural systems in trying to make them productive; environmentally clean and sustainable". The researchers leading this Forward Look feel that this area of research is in need of coherence and direction. Additionally, an agenda setting mission is essential at this point due to the current high public awareness of food and nutrition issues such as BSE, GM crops and obesity. The political momentum surrounding areas such as trade and global environmental change (GEC) further underlines the timeliness of this Forward Look. Following the completion of this agenda setting strategy, a successfully integrated research plan will give additional authority and political weight when targeting the decision makers. The ESF's Forward Looks are key in the development of strong links between the European scientific community and science policy makers. The purpose of a Forward Look is to define research agendas and priorities in a particular research domain and to communicate the results to research funders. The themes are selected on the basis of their importance to European research. Related Links European Science Foundation Robots And Inflatable Conveyor Belts Set To Slash Farm Labour Costs Warwick, UK (SPX) Mar 08, 2006 Robots are on the march again into the last bastion of labour intensive industry - farming and horticulture. Research engineers and horticulture specialists at the University of Warwick are working together to devise a suite of robots and automated systems which could transform farming and horticulture over the next decade. |
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