Aug 26 – 30, 2024
The Couvent des Jacobins
Europe/Paris timezone

Bypassing lock-ins preventing from innovation in cropping systems through co-construction: preliminary results of EXPLORE research project in Wallonia (Belgium)

Not scheduled
15m
Les Dortoirs (1st floor) (The Couvent des Jacobins)

Les Dortoirs (1st floor)

The Couvent des Jacobins

Rennes, France
Poster Synergies between researchers, society and farmers Poster session #1

Speaker

Logan Penvern (Université de Liège)

Description

Prospectives studies enables to envision possible and desirable futures. They are particularly used in agroecological transition and sustainable food regime studies. To name a few, the Ten Years For Agroecology (TYFA) model demonstrate how Europe can be food self-sufficient without using pesticides and artificial fertilizers (Poux & Aubert, 2018), the Afterres2050 scenario suggests ways for the French food system transition (Couturier et al., 2016), and, more recently, still in France, the TRANSFood project is focusing on food regimes’ transition at the individual scale (Kesse-Guyot, 2021).

In Wallonia (Belgium), public authorities support food systems transition through several strategies and policies. On one hand, the referential for sustainable food systems published in 2018 had led to the Manger Demain strategy (2019) as well as Food Wallonia action plan (2019). On the other hand, the TERRAÉ platform has been created in 2022 to build an agroecological transition referential and execute an ambitious action plan.

Despite these local policies and prospective studies’ demonstrations, we collectively struggle to engage in agroecological transition for sustainable food diet, at global, local and individual scales. Indeed, several lock-ins for food systems’ transition have been identified in numerous agricultural sectors, and have been well documented in the Belgian and Walloon contexts (Baret et al., 2013; De Herde et al., 2019; Lauvie & Stassart, 2016).

Started in late 2023, the EXPLoring innovative crOpping management for sustainable futuRE-proof food systems (EXPLORE) project, aims to design innovative agro-ecological cropping systems targeting sustainable and healthy dietary regimes in Wallonia. To do so, the project lean on three complementary work packages willing to:
- Work with stakeholders to redesign cropping systems and identify potential lock-ins and ways to overcome them (WP1);
- Mathematically simulate the desired innovative cropping systems and assess their different yields and trade-offs in terms of environmental impacts in the face of present-day and future climatic conditions (WP2);
- Investigate how agroecological levers empower regulation mechanisms for pests and weeds (WP3).

Gathering a research team of agronomists, economists and sociologists, the EXPLORE project rely on an interdisciplinary and co-constructive approach. EXPLORE WP1 main research question ask how co-constructed prospectives scenarios focusing on cropping systems can foster changes in food systems at larger scales. We will particularly analyze lock-ins preventing from matching supply and demand at local and regional scale, as well as tensions occurring between these scales (field, farm, territory and region).

The first step of the WP1 rely on the solicitations of several networks to identify existing initiatives and evaluate stakeholders’ interests in working on crop system diversification and food chain resettlement (i.e Food Policy Councils, Farmers working group, Local Action Groups, etc.). Depending on previous results, we will construct specific arenas where stakeholders will be invited to build prospective scenarios bypassing lock-ins preventing from innovation in cropping systems. Complementarily with WP2 (modelling), these scenarios’ abilities to match local production and demand as well as minimizing agriculture environmental impacts will be evaluated and results will guide arenas’ discussions.

In the end, this presentation will discuss EXPLORE WP1 provisional results about (1) arenas constitutions in regard to existing initiatives in Wallonia and (2) lock-ins identified as key topics to address in these arenas. The results will rely on literature review, semi-structured interviews with food system stakeholders as well as two preliminary workshops organized with researchers between April and July 2024.

References:
Baret, P., Stassart, P. M., Vanloqueren, G., & Van Damme, J. (2013). Dépasser les verrouillages de régimes socio-techniques des systèmes alimentaires pour construire une transition agroécologique. Premier Congrès Interdisciplinaire sur le Développement durable. https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/136905

Couturier, C., Charru, M., Doublet, S., & Pointereau, P. (2016). Le scénario Afterres2050. Version 2016. Association Solagro. https://afterres2050.solagro.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/solagro_afterres2050_version2016.pdf

De Herde, V., Maréchal, K., & Baret, P. V. (2019). Lock-ins and Agency : Towards an Embedded Approach of Individual Pathways in the Walloon Dairy Sector. Sustainability, 11(16), Article 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164405

Kesse-Guyot, E. (2021). Transitions alimentaires pour la santé et l’environnement—TRANSFood. Agence nationale de la recherche. https://anr.fr/Projet-ANR-21-CE21-0011

Lauvie, A., & Stassart, P. M. (2016). Les races hyperspécialisées entre verrouillage et ancrage local, l’exemple du Texel Belge. Cahiers Agricultures, 25(4), Article 4. https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2016031

Poux, X., & Aubert, P.-M. (2018). Une Europe agroécologique en 2050 : Une agriculture multifonctionnelle pour une alimentation saine (09; STUDY, p. 78). IDDRI. https://www.iddri.org/sites/default/files/PDF/Publications/Catalogue%20Iddri/Etude/201809-ST0918-tyfa_1.pdf

Keywords stakeholders’ arenas; transition's lock-ins; crop system diversification; food chain resettlement.

Primary author

Logan Penvern (Université de Liège)

Co-authors

Prof. Kevin Maréchal (Université de Liège) Prof. Pierre M. Stassart (Université de Liège)

Presentation materials