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EU-FarmBook is een verzameling van gecontroleerde beste praktijken voor boeren en bosbouwers. Alle inhoud in de bibliotheek is afkomstig van Horizon-onderzoeksprojecten. Lees meer over dit project op onze website.

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Europese vlag

Gefinancierd door de Europese Unie

Gefinancierd door de Europese Unie. Opvattingen en meningen zijn echter uitsluitend die van de auteur(s) en komen niet noodzakelijkerwijs overeen met die van de Europese Unie of de Europese Commissie. Noch de Europese Unie, noch de Europese Commissie kan hiervoor verantwoordelijk worden gehouden.

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Europese vlag
    • Environment
    • Economics
    • Crop farming
    • Forestry
    • Livestock

    Building agricultural innovation capacity from the bottom up: Using spillover effects from projects to strengthen agricultural innovation systems

    Current research emphasises that agricultural innovation projects are influenced in multiple ways by the Agricultural Innovation Systems (AIS) in which they operate. Yet little attention has been paid to the reverse direction of this relationship, i.e. how agricultural innovation projects affect AIS in the course of their innovative activities. Accordingly, there are currently no tools to measure such AIS spillovers from agricultural innovation projects. This paper shows that even where agricultural innovation projects have not been designed with the explicit aim of influencing AIS they can have spillovers on the AIS in which they operate. Based on this finding, it argues that designing agricultural innovation projects in a way that maximises such positive and reduces negative AIS spillovers would be a useful tool for strengthening agricultural innovation capacities in a particular territory or sector. Based on the concept of agricultural innovation projects as Organisational Innovation Systems (OIS) that are embedded in AIS, the paper develops an analytical framework for assessing spillovers of such projects on AIS and applies it to a case study of an Operational Group in the German Federal State of Hessen.

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    Project

    LIAISON

    Better Rural Innovation: Linking Actors, Instruments and Policies through Networks

    Locatie
    • Europe
    Auteurs
    • Susanne von Münchhausen
    Doel
    • Communication
    • Dissemination
    • Education/Training
    Soort bestand
    Document
    Bestandsgrootte
    1.92 MB
    Gepubliceerd op
    24-04-2023
    Taal van herkomst
    English
    Officiële project website
    LIAISON
    Licensie
    CC BY
    Trefwoorden
    • Agricultural innovation system
    • Agricultural innovation project
    • Organisational innovation system
    • Spillover effect
    • Project assessment

    Gerelateerde inhoud

    A Bio-inspired Multilayer Drainage System

    Document

    Agricultural run-off and subsurface drainage tiles transport a significant amount of nitrogen and phosphorus leached after fertilization. alchemia-nova GmbH in collaboration with University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna developed two multi-layer vertical filter systems to address the agricultural run-off issue, which has been installed on the slope of an agricultural field in Mistelbach, Austria. While another multi-layer addressing subsurface drainage water is implemented in Gleisdorf, Austria. The goal is to develop a drainage filter system to retain water and nutrients. Both multi-layer filter systems contain biochar and other substrates with adsorption properties of nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus). The filter system can be of practical use if an excess of nutrients being washed out is of concern in the fields of the practitioner by keeping the surrounding waters clean. This approach may result in economic value by re-using the saturated biochar as fertilizer and improving the soil structure, thus increasing long-term soil fertility. Link: https://wateragri.eu/a-bio-inspired-multilayer-drainage-system/

    • Drainage System
    • water treatment system
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    NANOCELLULOSE MEMBRANES FOR NUTRIENT RECOVERY

    Document

    This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Grant Agreement No 858735This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Grant Agreement No 858735. FACTSHEET NANOCELLULOSE MEMBRANES FOR NUTRIENT RECOVERY Key information Functionalized nanocellulose membranes can take up nitrate and phosphate. These membranes can be put in a water treatment unit. As the membranes are biobased, degradable materials, they can after use be added to the soil, thus returning the leached nutrients back for their original purpose providing fertilizers (nutrient recycling).

    • Biobased nutrient capture
    • agricultural drainage water
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    Environmental monitoring within greenhouse crops using wireless sensors

    Document

    Because variables such as temperature and humidity have a profound effect on the activity of crop pests, diseases and natural enemies, the ability to monitor environmental conditions within a crop has always been important for crop protection.

    • Brassica
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    • diagnostics
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