Funded under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), Mission 4 Component 2 Investment 1.3, Theme 10.
Knowledge transfer and innovation strategies towards technological transfer actions, including dissemination and adoption of sustainable and energy-saving in food SMEs.
Report on the transferability of technological innovation and adoption of sustainable practices in food SMEs (M36)
Launched by European Commission (EC) in 2020, the Farm to Fork Strategy (F2F) aims to redesign sustainable agro-food supply chains, including farming system (FS), distribution, processing, consumers’ food security, since “food systems remain one of the key drivers of climate change and environmental degradation” (EC, 2020; p. 5). One of the main purposes of F2F is to support organic FS. While in 2020 organic land represented 9.1% of the total EU agricultural land (Eurostat, 2022), the strategy proposes to reach the 25% in 10 years (EC, 2020). To do so, F2F invites to stimulate both supply and demand. Supporting the demand means to increase the awareness and trust of consumers. Supporting the supply means to sustain the resilience and sustainability of organic FS, by making it more efficient, promoting new voluntary measures, increasing the farmers income.
The creation of Biodistricts is in line with F2F, since they are geographical areas where the actors of the food chain sign an agreement for the use and promotion of primary and processed food products from organic FS (AIAB, 2015; Abitabile et al, 2020).
Literature review of the existing documentation around criteria and indicators related to the social, economic, political, gender and cultural dimensions of the sustainability of the agri-food field, in the existing networks and initiatives in Italy.
Literature review of food public purchasing experiences and initiatives that have established criteria of proximity, ecology and guarantees through Participatory Guarantee Systems
We will identify the local food capacity of local organic farming system, in order to understand what is available at local level. By the other side we will point out the need for organic food by consumers and commercial actors (retailers, school canteens, catering, food processors) distributing at local level, in order to understand the gaps between the demand and the offer.
We will study the different food values chains already operating either through alternative food networks and/or through more conventional food supply chains that include organic food. This means to include short food supply chains, but also other forms of food procurement.
The analysis will be focused on the contracts, the spatial and social organization of supply chains. This will help in analyzing the environmental, social and economic impacts of supply chains. Network analysis will be applied to both understand the organization and the knowledge transfer, the possibility for future innovation. The analysis is important to understand the possibility to access to organic food for consumers. Data will be collected through database, interviews and participatory approach.
The project aims at contributing to the following reports with a focus on organic food: