The starting point of the event was the outcome of a foresight process carried out by the EU's Standing Committee on Agricultural Research (SCAR). A Foresight Expert Group, set up in June 2006, developed scenarios based on the factors most likely to disrupt European agriculture over the next 20 years.
In the climate shock scenario, an acceleration of environmental impacts related to climate change seriously disrupts European agriculture.
The second, energy crisis scenario foresees an energy crisis, where Europe's lack of investments in bioenergies leaves it facing severe energy shortages when the oil price skyrockets.
A food crisis scenario envisages a world where global agriculture is faced with the challenge of providing sufficient, safe food for the growing world population.
Finally, a 'cooperation with nature' scenario offers a more optimistic vision of the future, in which society and technology work together to ensure sustainable development at all levels.
The authors of the foresight report note that by 'disruption' they mean fast change, resulting in both positive and negative changes. 'Therefore the main challenge facing agro-food actors is the speed of adaptation and proactive responses to secure a European lead in this area,' they write.
Other speakers at the workshop backed up the foresight group's findings; with most agreeing that climate change in particular would pose major problems for Europe's farmers in the coming decades.
“One of the most important results of the Commission conference is that there is a need for new European research and new technologies, said Christian Patermann, director for ’Biotechnologies, agriculture and food research” at the European Commission in a video news interview, which is part of a regular series published on the CORDIS Knowledge-based bio-economy service. “The efforts to do so are multinational, multidisciplinary, long term, addressing the complexities of agriculture and its survival […] This includes as well the need to communicate complex results to farmers, to forest owners and particularly to young farmers how to use this knowledge, which is the basis for the new bio-economy.”
'We need the same thing as other businesses - access to research results,' said at the Conference Giacomo Ballari, President of the European Council of Young Farmers. 'We need a common platform where researchers and farmers can meet.'
The conference proceedings will be added to the other outcomes of the foresight process, which will feed into a report by the European Commission on the coordination of agricultural research in Europe. The report will be presented to the European Parliament and Council in 2008.
Virginia Mercouri | Source: CORDIS
Further information: cordis.europa.eu/news
ec.europa.eu/research/conferences/2007/scar/index_en.htm
More articles from Agricultural and Forestry Science:
Sweet corn story begins in UW-Madison lab
23.11.2009 | University of Wisconsin-Madison
New Map of Variation in Maize Genetics Holds Promise for Developing New Varieties
23.11.2009 | Cornell University
Daycare may double TV time for young children
24.11.2009 | Studies and Analyses
Insomnia prevalent among cancer patients who receive chemotherapy
24.11.2009 | Studies and Analyses
24.11.2009 | Social Sciences
Multidisciplinary meeting on Urological Cancers aims to benefit cancer patients
20.11.2009 | Event News
'Golden Age' for clinical psychology in Northern Ireland
20.11.2009 | Event News
New Perspectives in Marine Anti-Fouling Research
11.11.2009 | Event News