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Crop improvements for future‐proofing European food systems: A focus‐group‐driven analysis of agricultural production stakeholder priorities and viewpoints

Affiliation
Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK ; Division of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences, University of Nottingham, Loughborough, UK
Stetkiewicz, Stacia;
Affiliation
Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK ; Health Systems Collaborative, Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Menary, Jonathan;
Affiliation
Marketing and Consumer Behaviour group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Nair, Abhishek;
Affiliation
Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK
Rufino, Mariana C.;
Affiliation
Marketing and Consumer Behaviour group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Fischer, Arnout R.H.;
Affiliation
BASF Innovation Center Gent, Gent, Belgium
Cornelissen, Marc;
Affiliation
ACTA, The Agricultural Technical Institutes, Paris, France
Duchesne, Remi;
Affiliation
ACTA, The Agricultural Technical Institutes, Paris, France
Guichaoua, Adrien;
Affiliation
Euroseeds, Brussels, Belgium
Jorasch, Petra;
Affiliation
Université Grenoble Alpes, INRA, CNRS, Grenoble INP, GAEL, Saint-Martin- d'Hères, France
Lemarié, Stephane;
Affiliation
Plants for the Future’ European Technology Platform, Brussels, Belgium
Nanda, Amrit K.;
GND
1058993402
Affiliation
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute for Biosafety in Plant Biotechnology, Germany
Wilhelm, Ralf;
Affiliation
Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK
Davies, Jessica A.C.

Crop breeding is one of the main tools which can assist in future-proofing food systems for more sustainable outcomes. In order to ensure priorities are aligned with the needs and wants of food system actors, it is essential to engage with key stakeholders to understand preferences on plant breeding solutions. This study presents results from a series of online focus groups conducted with agricultural production related stakeholders (i.e. farmers and farmer representatives, policymakers and NGOs) regarding the potential for crop improvement to future-proof European food systems. Stakeholders shared concern around climate change and environmental impacts (particularly drought and heat stress), and general agreement about the need to develop resilient crops which combine multiple positive attributes, while reducing trade-offs and negative externalities. Stakeholders also prioritized plant breeding solutions for areas where they felt they had little agency, and existing alternative solutions, such as improving input use efficiency, or altering diets to be considered where these are available. This highlights the need for the crop breeding community to focus its attentions on the ‘most hard to fix’ issues, where in-field measures are currently not offering viable solutions, to maximize acceptance and adoption by agricultural production stakeholders. It also highlights that consideration of trade-offs, within plant and within a broader agri-food context, must be integrated into crop breeding research and development, with trade-off analysis an explicit component of breeding research. Understanding broader agri-food system knock-on effects of plant innovation is a non-trivial challenge requiring interdisciplinary research and close partnerships with food system stakeholders.

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License Holder: 2022 The Authors.

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