During a Food 2030 conference, which took place at the Agriculture University in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, in June 2018, University College Dublin (UCD) proposed a new partnership model to build capacity for agri-food sustainability.
Europe is losing competitiveness and it has been difficult for it to pursue agri-food policy objectives such as: achieving a circular bioeconomy; delivering safe, nutritious, high quality and affordable food and decarbonising the economy. The innovation required to drive competitiveness in these areas is a challenge which needs human capital with as yet little understood skills and capabilities.
Processing optimisation and nutrition impact
Through an Infrastructure for Sustainable Development (ISD), the UCD proposal is to solve this challenge by bringing multi-actor partnerships together combining production strategies, processing optimisation and nutrition impact, with sustainable practices across the food chain, from producer to consumer.
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Triona McCormack, director of Research, UCD[/caption]
At the heart of the proposed approach is the circular bioeconomy, maximising food production and processing cycles to optimise the value of our resources and minimise environmental impact. The social, business, policy, ethical and regulatory frameworks will distribute value across the chain from producer to consumer.
The proposal was made by Triona McCormack, UCD director of research during a two-day conference from June 14-15, entitled Research and Innovation for Food and Nutrition Security – Transforming our Food Systems, which took place under the umbrella of the Bulgarian presidency of the EU Council.
Strategic long-term food and nutrition security
The overarching goal of the conference is to engage a wide diversity of stakeholders to build a shared and inclusive vision and provide input to strategic long-term food and nutrition security related research and innovation developments at the EU level.
Three UCD speakers, the only speakers from an Irish university, participated in the conference. In addition to McCormack, the other UCD speakers are, Professor Lorraine Brennan and Professor Nick Holden, both leading agri-food and nutrition researchers.
Professor Brennan is a principle investigator in the UCD School of Agriculture and Food Science and in the UCD Institute of Food and Health where she leads the successful nutrition, biomarkers, and health research group. Professor Holden is a professor of biosystems engineering in the UCD School of Biosystems and Food Engineering, and leader of the food chain sustainability research group in the UCD Institute of Food and Health.
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UCD's Professor Lorraine Brennan[/caption]
In her keynote talk entitled 'Leading from the ground up: resolving the food, health and sustainability challenge', McCormack, said: “The Infrastructure for Sustainable Development proposal will see research and education partners, working with industry, government and NGOs; all as active players and contributors to the partnership. Importantly, each entity will operate with the principles as set out in the UN’s SDG agenda.
Play a leadership role in transforming Europe’s food systems
“Ireland has a significant and leading agri-food sector, we can and should play a leadership role in transforming Europe’s food systems. The EU must also look beyond its borders working with partners across the globe to deliver on the ambition set out in the UN’s SDGs. As Ireland’s Global University, these are ambitions that we at UCD share and will contribute to.”
Professor Loraine Brennan, a speaker in the plenary discussion entitled, 'Understanding the complexity of food systems and dynamics of how they must change', said: “In order to ensure that we can deliver Food 2030 we need to ensure that our food systems become nutrition sensitive. We need to think right through from food production to the food on our plate and its impact on our nutrition and health.
“We have a unique opportunity to deal with major nutrition and health issues in a foods systems manner. Food 2030 offers the possibility to think differently about how food is produced, processed and sold.”
Professor Nick Holden, a speaker in the breakout session entitled How to build resilient food systems by 2030? said: “We need to know the baseline environmental, social and economic impacts of the food system and we need to identify what it should become. Food system transformation needs to be purposeful and intentional. My work contributes to this necessary knowledge by looking at the system holistically.
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UCD's Professor Nick Holden[/caption]
Need to collect and use data from all stages in the system
“We need to collect and use data from all stages in the system, Internet of Food, IoT, Big data, to better understand how the system works and how it can be sustainable. Use of data comes with very important ethical, social and business responsibilities that need to be addressed immediately to ensure stakeholder confidence and to provide a factual basis for decision making.”
Other speakers at the conference include; Jean-Eric Paquet, director general of DG Research and Innovation; Carlos Moedas, European commissioner for research and innovation; Rumen Porozhanov, Bulgarian minister of agriculture and food; Vytenis Andriukaitis, European commissioner for health and food safety; and Phil Hogan, European commissioner for agriculture and rural development.
McCormack concluded: “This conference is occurring at an important time. The EU’s multi-annual framework fund is in the final stages of development, so it is timely that Europe consider its relationship beyond its borders and how activities within the Union can be aligned to broader global goals. Ireland, and UCD, have an opportunity to lead a discussion of EU’s relationship beyond its borders, particularly its relationship with its neighbouring continent, Africa.
“Ireland’s leadership in food and nutrition security is demonstrated by having two leading researchers address this European conference and both are from UCD.”