Brussels
– The EU-backed ‘Plants for the Future’ Technology Platform
officially released its full and final Strategic Research Agenda (SRA) at
a lunch hosted by MEPs Giles Chichester and John Purvis in the European Parliament
in Brussels today. The document backed by scientists, farmers and industry
and other public and private stakeholders signposts a route for Europe to
use plant sciences and biotechnology to enhance EU competitiveness and welfare.
Plants for the Future is a stakeholder forum on plant genomics and biotechnology
that was initiated by the European Commission in 2003. It is coordinated by
EPSO and EuropaBio, and has members from industry, academia and the agricultural
sector. It provides a short-, medium- and long-term vision for Europe’s
plant agricultural sector and sets out a consensus on the research needed
to fulfill the vision.
The SRA identifies five challenges for Europe’s society to which the
plant sector can contribute:
- Healthy, safe and sufficient food and feed
- Plant-based products – chemical and energy
- Sustainable agriculture, forestry and landscape
- Vibrant and competitive basic research
- Consumer choice and governance
Speaking at the event, the president of EPSO Mr Gruissem said: “Europe
must put its knowledge base in the field of plant science into practice to
keep the European agricultural sector innovative and internationally competitive.”
Plant genomics, the other life sciences and biotechnology are the main scientific
drivers of the bio-economy which is worth an estimated €1.6 trillion
a year in Europe. Together, they make up what is becoming known as the knowledge-based
bio-economy.
“To improve their future competitiveness, European farmers will need
more diversified and environmentally friendly crops, producing more and better
quality food and non-food products. This real challenge will be tackled through
state of the art innovation, especially in plant biotechnologies,” said
Mr Serra Arias, former vice-president of the Committee of Agricultural Organisations
(COPA).
For example, improved crops could be developed and grown to combat health
problems, such as cardiovascular disease, obesity or diabetes. New or improved
feed could also be used for farm animals to reduce Europe’s dependency
on foreign imports of animal feed, such as soybeans. Furthermore, plant science
is a key technology for addressing the challenges of climate change by replacing
fossil fuels with renewable sources of biomass for energy, including biofuels.
"The development of the knowledge-based bio-economy – involving
a global industry based on renewable plant resources as an alternative to
the current fossil fuel-based industry – constitutes by far the most
challenging and promising opportunity in terms of economic, environmental
and societal potential,” said Mr Markwart Kunz of German sugar manufacturer
Südzucker AG.
We hope that the research themes described in today’s Research Agenda
will feature in the EU Commission conference which opens June 26th in Brussels
entitled “Towards future challenges of agricultural research in Europe”
and in any European Agricultural Research Agenda that may be developed thereafter.
Source:
‘Plants for the Future’ invites Europe to reap fruits of knowledge-based
bio-economy. European Plant Science Organisation Press release (25.6.07)
(http://www.epsoweb.org/Catalog/TP/TP
SRA.htm)
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