The future of crop production
Austria is a pioneer of sustainable agriculture in Europe, in which economic, ecological and social aspects are given equal consideration. The Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Climate and Environmental Protection, Regions and Water Management (BMLUK) has initiated the "Future of Crop Production" strategy process in order to continue along this path. The aim of this strategy process is to develop modern solutions for plant cultivation that guarantee security for farmers, consumers and the environment alike.
Challenges
Adaptations to climate change, the loss of fertile soils and innovations in plant cultivation and plant protection are described as major challenges for plant cultivation in the 21st century. This primarily involves site-adapted, environmentally conscious production and cultivation systems, breeding plants that can withstand heat and drought, and combating heat-loving invasive plants and pests. In order to arrive at viable solutions, plant cultivation must be considered in its entirety and complexity. This concerns the health of our soils and their fertilisation, as well as plant breeding and variety diversity and the protection of plants against pests. Applied research and innovation are the key to success.
Fundamentals
Austria's arable farming is characterised by many different forms of cultivation. This is due to the diversity of soil types and the climatic conditions of our agricultural production areas. The farming systems and cultivation measures must take these different conditions into account. Austria's agriculture has therefore committed itself to the strategy of integrated crop production and plant protection in order to guarantee productivity, sustainability and environmental protection in equal measure with innovative, flexible cultivation methods.
Just like nature itself, society's demands on agriculture are subject to constant change. Consumers have an increased awareness of safety and quality. On the other hand, there are threats to food security due to climate change, the constant loss of fertile soil and the generally increasing scarcity of resources. This is particularly true for Austria, as the Alpine region is being hit harder than average by climate change and Austria has lost more fertile farmland in the last 50 years than comparable neighbouring countries.
Aim
The technical papers are aimed at economic stakeholders and authorities as well as companies and social multipliers. The contents are intended to serve as a basis for further measures and decisions for the specialised public in crop production. To this end, agricultural scientists from the fields of soil health and plant nutrition, sustainable plant production and integrative plant protection, genetic engineering and toxicology worked together with experts in training and consulting on the topics of plant cultivation and agricultural technology as well as economists from the agricultural sector.
Background: Strategy process for the future of crop production
On behalf of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Climate Protection, Environment, Regions and Water Management (BMLUK), future issues and challenges for modern, high-yielding and environmentally conscious crop production were discussed with relevant stakeholders in Austrian crop production. The extensive knowledge and the different expectations of modern crop production were collected. The results were summarised in a 10-point programme with measures on how the Austrian plant cultivation sector should be shaped in the future:
10-point programme for modern plant cultivation
- Promoting a diverse crop rotation and increasing biodiversity
- Site-adapted breeding and varieties
- Promotion of soil-conserving production methods and targeted environmental monitoring
- Expansion of integrated plant protection
- Further reduction in the use of pesticides
- Clear and transparent framework conditions for the authorisation of plant protection products
- Linking practice and research
- Education campaign for modern plant cultivation
- Increased public relations work
- Better networking of all stakeholders
All relevant stakeholders in the field of plant cultivation were involved: agriculture, processing, trade, testing centres, interest groups, non-profit organisations, industry and science. This allowed the extensive knowledge and the different expectations of modern plant cultivation to be brought together. The main topics were research and training, public relations work, legal and regulatory framework conditions and cooperation between all stakeholders.
Dialogue
AGES has initiated a broad social dialogue process on behalf of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Climate and Environmental Protection, Regions and Water Management (BMLUK) to ensure the ecological, economic and social performance of Austria's plant production in the long term under changing conditions. The dialogue on balancing interests is being intensified in order to create social acceptance for necessary plant cultivation measures through more intensive cooperation between agriculture, the environment and nutrition.
We organise regular professional exchanges on current topics in plant cultivation in Austria with stakeholders from agriculture, processing, trade, testing bodies, interest groups, non-profit organisations, industry and science. Regular "round tables" are intended to promote the exchange of different points of view, dispel prejudices and provide a better understanding of the needs of the other stakeholder.
The focus is on open communication both internally and externally, including, of course, consensus and dissent on the respective topics. All stakeholders endeavour to work together and achieve results. The results of the meetings should be recorded and communicated. This is the wish of the participants in the stakeholder process Strategy for the Future of Crop Production and has also been set out in a 10-point programme.
Preamble
- The Future of Plant Production dialogue is an essential building block for new forms of cooperation and a supplement to existing mechanisms for networking ecological, economic and social concerns in Austria.
- Periodic "round tables" are held to discuss current plant cultivation issues.
- The dialogue platform is based on a relationship of trust and partnership between the participants, and round tables are intended to promote such a relationship.
- The joint work should be consensus-oriented and characterised by continuity.
- The participants accept and respect the positions and interests of the other dialogue partners.
- In order to improve preparation, the participants should be able to name and introduce topics in good time.
- The round tables should be organised by the stakeholders with experts on the respective topics.
- Participation in the round table extends to the organisations taking part in the Future of Plant Production strategy process.
- In this sense, the dialogue includes all relevant sectors and organisations and can also be supplemented or expanded as desired and agreed with the participants.
- The financing of the round tables and the provision of the necessary infrastructure as well as any necessary presentations will be assumed by AGES according to financial possibilities.
- For reasons of economy and resource conservation, existing resources and existing scientific foundations should be used first and foremost.
- The dialogue begins with an open outcome. A maximum degree of consensus is sought.
- Thematic proposals and opinions are documented in anonymised reports on the results.
- Formal votes are not planned.
- The dialogue is intended to create the basis for developing solutions by mutual agreement.
- The financing of the implementation of the proposals for action is the responsibility of the respective stakeholders within the scope of their possibilities.
Round table
The "Round Table" Future Crop Production is based on a relationship of trust between all participants in a spirit of partnership. The participants accept and respect the positions and interests of the other dialog partners. An open exchange of opinions requires trust in and compliance with the rules of the game. For this reason, a culture of discussion and information is practiced that is borrowed from the principles of the so-called "Chatham House Rules" and thus preserves the anonymity of the discussion partners. The meetings are documented in the form of minutes focusing on topics and content. No persons, names or groups are named in the minutes or assigned to the contents.
25th Round Table: "Opportunities and possibilities of integrated pest management"
"As little as possible, as much as necessary" is the credo of integrated crop protection, whose strategy is based on the use and synergy of all available preventive, non-chemical and chemical measures. At the same time, strict regulatory requirements, which take greater account of the impact on the environment, pollinators and biodiversity, are leading to the elimination of many active ingredients. This creates conflicts of interest between consumers' expectations of environmentally conscious and, to the same extent, high-yield agriculture that can ensure food security in Austria. As part of our round table on 23 January 2025, new perspectives of integrated pest management were scientifically examined, while at the same time the economic side of reducing pesticides was considered. Details can be found in the minutes.
24th Round Table "EU Directive on Soil Monitoring and Resilience"
According to the EU Soil Strategy, soils in the EU should be in a healthy condition by 2050 at the latest and this condition should be maintained. The EU Commission's proposal for a directive on soil monitoring and resilience of 5 July 2023 is intended to create a soil monitoring framework and implement measures for the sustainable management of soils. As the proposal has a major impact on future soil management, we discussed the "EU Soil Monitoring and Resilience Directive" on 12 April 2024, particularly from the perspective of agriculture and forestry, authorities and science. Details can be found in the minutes of the round table.
23rd Round Table "Plant Propagating Material & EU Regulation"
The EU Commission has published a proposal for a regulation on the production and marketing of plant reproductive material. The regulation concerns the marketing of seeds and planting material, in particular certification and variety authorisation, and is intended to combine the ten directives currently in force and develop them further against the backdrop of the Green Deal. On 10 November 2023, we discussed the EU proposal at a round table. Details can be found in the minutes.
22nd Round Table "New Breeding Techniques & EU Regulation
The EU Commission has revised parts of the European genetic engineering legislation and on July 5 published a regulatory proposal related to New Breeding Techniques that takes into account objectives of the Green Deal and the Farm-to-Fork strategy for more sustainable food production. As part of our roundtables, we have already addressed the issue of EU GM regulation twice, primarily in relation to the labeling of genetically modified foods and the legal status of genetically modified plants "bred" through a CRISPR/Cas genetic engineering process. On July 18, 2023, we discussed the EU proposal at a roundtable (Dialogue Protocol).
21st Round Table "Climate Change
Climate change affects global agricultural production and thus food security. Austria is particularly affected by climate change, as recent studies and practical experience show. Summers with long periods of heat and drought as well as extreme weather events with hailstorms and storms have increased significantly in recent decades. Some of our native crops suffer increasing damage under heat and drought. Heat-loving crops and weed species, in turn, benefit from rising temperatures. Alien pests and pathogens are also among the beneficiaries of climate change and can displace native species and cause major damage to agricultural crops.
At a climate change roundtable on March 23, 2023, we highlighted impacts of climate change on crop production and discussed adaptation strategies and measures. AGES will also conduct an annual focus on climate change adaptation in 2023 under the title "klimafit" . The highlight and conclusion of this thematic focus is a "Climate Day" on October 16, 2023, during which projects and best practice examples will be presented that deal with climate change or adaptation measures to climate change.
20th Round Table "Sustainable Use Regulation
The sustainability goals of the European Union (EU) are reflected in the Farm to Fork strategy, the Green Deal and the efforts to preserve biodiversity. Agriculture and forestry have an important role to play in achieving these goals.
Most recently, a draft of a new Sustainable Use Regulation (SUR) has been published in the EU. This regulation is intended to cast the goals of the farm-to-fork strategy into a legal framework and make them measurable. Among other things, this legislative proposal contains the following points: Setting binding reduction targets, increasing the use of integrated pest management and improving the availability of data.
At a roundtable on "Sustainable Use Regulation" on September 13, 2022, we discussed the planned measures of the EU Commission proposal.
19th Carbon Farming Round Table
By the end of 2022, the EU Commission has announced an EU legal framework for the certification of CO2 reduction in the atmosphere - keyword: tradable carbon certificates from agriculture. However, the concrete design is not yet clear.
In addition to professional and technical challenges, there is also the question of how carbon farming can be reconciled with the increasing demand for raw materials for the production of food and animal feed, and also for the provision of renewable energies due to the expected shortage of fossil fuels.
At a roundtable on April 5, 2022, we discussed "carbon farming" as a climate protection measure, as a new income opportunity for agriculture and as a possible compensation measure for companies. This is because agriculture and forestry are the only sectors that can also sequester CO2 in raw materials. Therefore, the topic of carbon sequestration has an important role to play with regard to achieving climate neutrality.
18th Round Table "Sustainable Safe Protein Feed".
Feed for livestock and pets is at the beginning of the food chain and therefore has a great influence on food quality and safety. In order to be able to guarantee this and for optimal nutrition of our livestock, the use of high-quality and, above all, safe feed is indispensable. The BMLUK 's protein strategy aims to further expand domestic soybean cultivation and reduce high-protein animal feed in order to cut imports of soybeans and soybean meal by half to 250,000 tons annually by 2030.
To meet the objectives of sustainability and security of supply of regionally produced protein feeds, the latest findings from technical and qualitative processing, nutritional science for livestock, and safety issues related to protein contents, amino acids, and salmonella must be taken into account. According to the Protein Report of the European Commission, we are engaged in further increasing competitiveness through research & development on technical innovations and processing. In this way, we actively contribute to climate protection and exploit the full potential of protein crops.
The goal of the Austrian protein strategy is to further expand the domestic protein supply by integrating the regional value chain and to reduce protein imports. Quality and safety as well as the sustainable use of protein feed resources are therefore the topics of the 3rd Round Table on the Protein Strategy on November 25, 2021, as part of the Dialogue on Future Crop Production.
The cultivation of protein crops has development potential not only in Austria. The topic is also coming more into focus in European agriculture. The expansion of production and the supply of domestic plant protein has also been sustainably anchored in the government program. Most recently, the COVID 19 pandemic demonstrated how important it is to have a domestic supply of food and feedstuffs and to strive for the greatest possible independence from imports.
The participation of the Dialogue on Future Crop Production experts in the strategy process therefore provided an important basis for future measures to exploit the full potential of protein crops for competitive and environmentally conscious land management. At a roundtable on July 15, 2021, the results of the strategy process "Austrian Protein Strategy" were presented and discussed with all stakeholders of the sector along the supply chain, administrations and science & research.
Background: In April 2019, the BMLRT launched the project "Austrian Protein Strategy", in which many experts of Dialog Zukunft Pflanzenbau actively participated. The work on this project is now completed and the final report will be published soon. The contents of the protein strategy were presented to the working groups at the round table.
Phosphorus is an essential element for all living things, as it serves, among other things, as the motor of metabolism. However, the resource is not substitutable. The raw material phosphorus, which is indispensable for plant production, is classified by the EU as a critical raw material. In July 2019, the European Parliament therefore adopted a new EU fertilizer product regulation. The recitals explicitly mentioned the recycling of the scarce resource from sewage sludge, among other things. At our roundtable on circular economy and phosphorus recycling on April 27, 2021, we discussed phosphorus recovery. Municipal sewage sludge contains large amounts of phosphorus. The utilization is low. Currently, only sewage sludge is applied to agricultural land. Over 50 percent of municipal sewage sludge is incinerated.
Climate change affects ecosystems in their entirety, including the soil and thus the nutrient and water cycle as well as soil formation processes. It can be assumed that due to increased heavy precipitation and at the same time increasing dry phases, changes in humus and nutrient dynamics, soil structure and water management, erosion tendency and biodiversity are to be expected. In addition, due to the high land use, increasingly less production land is available. At the round table "Soils fit for the climate - the soil in (climate) change" on June 13, 2019, current research projects were presented and possible threats as well as countermeasures or measures for climate change adaptation were discussed.
As nitrogen-fixing plants, soybeans and legumes are good for the soil and climate, and as important protein suppliers, they are good for human and animal nutrition. Protein crops are therefore one of several pillars of sustainable agriculture. At the roundtable "Austrian Protein Strategy 2020+" on April 5, 2019, the Austrian protein balance was analyzed and existing national initiatives and best practice models for protein crops in Austria were discussed.
In a next step, working groups will be established to develop an overall Austrian strategy to exploit the full potential of soy & legumes for competitive and environmentally conscious land management. The four work packages are based on the Protein Report of the European Commission, which for the first time provides a European view on the supply of protein crops. The four working group leaders as well as the objectives of the working groups can be found in the presentation "Austrian Protein Strategy - Structure and Planned Approach". Target group for participation are all key stakeholders along the agricultural production chain, administrations as well as science & research. Until April 26, 2019, they can register their interest with one of the working group leaders via email. Multiple registrations by institutions or to working groups are possible in principle; coordination within the organization is requested: Working Group 1 "Climate, Environment and Food": josef.pinkl@ages.at Working Group 2 "Production": a.marksteiner@lk-oe.at Working Group 3 "Value Chain": christian.gessl@ama.gv.at Working Group 4 "Research & Development and GAP": monika.stangl@bmnt.gv.at An Austrian overall strategy on protein crops 2020+, commissioned by the Federal Ministry of Sustainability and Tourism (BMNT), is to bundle national initiatives to expand production and thus increase self-sufficiency by autumn 2019, strengthen the expansion of supply chains with domestic plant proteins for food and animal feed, and push research & development activities and cooperation at EU level.
Honey bees make an indispensable contribution to biodiversity through their pollination activities and contribute to food security in Austria. Increased colony losses worldwide were the impetus for the research project "Future Bee" to investigate bee health and the influence of agricultural production, beekeeping and weather conditions on colony and bee losses. At the round table "Research on honey bee health" on November 8, 2018, the research results and conclusions for the practice of beekeepers and farmers were discussed.
Drift is the undesirable spread of applied pesticide active ingredients to non-target areas during application by spraying. At a round table on July 9, 2018, on the topic of "Coexistence", precautionary measures in crop protection were discussed in order to reduce drift and active ingredient contamination as much as possible and to ensure the coexistence of organic and conventional farms.
On November 27, 2017, the active ingredient glyphosate was re-approved at the European level. The member states voted by qualified majority in favor of the EU Commission's proposal to renew the authorization for five years. At a round table on December 14, 2017, the legal implications for the agricultural and non-agricultural sectors in Austria were discussed.
Based on the legal text of the European Commission, 50 representatives of the federal ministries, the federal states (responsible for the application of plant protection products), the Federal Office for Food Safety (responsible authority for the authorization of plant protection products), the social partners, agricultural and non-agricultural large-scale users as well as environmental protection organizations discussed legal options for authorization and application restrictions. In addition to the further procedure within the framework of the EU legal requirements, practical experiences of the application in the agricultural and non-agricultural sector as well as possible alternatives were the subject of the expert presentations. The technical and scientific aim is to reduce the use of plant protection products to the necessary level in accordance with EU legislation. Austria has already implemented numerous glyphosate use restrictions in the past. The new Commission Regulation now contains additional scope for action. In addition, the motion for a feasibility study and an action plan for the phase-out of glyphosate in Austria was introduced in the Austrian Parliament on December 13, 2017.
What are the next steps? The Federal Office for Food Safety (BAES) is responsible for the approval of plant protection products. In Austria, 49 products containing the active ingredient glyphosate are currently approved. Authorization holders who wish to continue placing their products on the market in Austria must submit an application for renewal of the authorizations for glyphosate to the BAES within three months of the effective date of the renewal. If the approval holder does not submit an application for renewal, the approval will expire one year from the expiry of the original approval of the active substance to be renewed (plus the sell-off and use-up period). What does the BAES check according to the possibilities under EU law? In the non-agricultural sector: No approval for the home and allotment garden sector and extensive restrictions in the public sector. In the agricultural sector: No approval for crop treatment. The federal states are responsible for the use of plant protection products and can implement further restrictions on the use of plant protection products containing glyphosate within the scope of EU legal possibilities. For a total ban on the marketing of herbicides containing glyphosate, a number of strict preconditions have to be demonstrated, which must be met cumulatively. These preconditions are not currently met. Therefore, a feasibility study and an action plan for the phase-out of glyphosate in Austria should be developed. Overall, it is necessary to strengthen confidence in the technical-scientific decision-making process of plant protection products. Therefore, the announcement of the EU Commission to present or improve the transparency, quality and independence of scientific evaluations of active substances in the future is to be welcomed.
As part of a two-day "country visit" to Austria, EFSA Director Dr. Bernhard Url was a guest at Dialog Zukunft Pflanzenbau on November 23, 2017. The focus of the European Food Safety Authority for 2017 is cooperation with the Member States. Under the keyword "Open EFSA", EFSA is working on the challenges around Open Data, citizen participation and transparency. More than 80 stakeholders from AGES' dialogue networks on food safety and food security discussed current (risk) topics.
Neobiota and neophytes have a major impact on Austrian crop production and thus on food security. The roundtable on September 19, 2017 aims to shed light on the impact of "aliens" on plant health and thus our agriculture. Together with experts we will discuss the direct and indirect impacts of invasive plant and animal pests on biodiversity and ecosystems, especially agriculture, but also forestry and water bodies.
Food losses contribute substantially to the waste of resources, in particular land, water, energy, labor and capital. On March 14, 2017, the EU Parliament voted on a package of laws on the circular economy aimed at halving food waste by 2030. This legislative package also calls on farmers to avoid losses in the production process. The "Harvest Losses" roundtable on May 29, 2017, aimed to shed light on plant pre-harvest losses in the field, during harvesting, and other losses during transport and storage in Austria. Practical examples are the wireworm & the potato or mold toxins in cereals & corn, as well as storage losses and storage pests and technology-related losses.
The existing legal requirements for the evaluation of traditionally bred varieties or genetically modified plants do not do full justice to the "new breeding techniques". The discussion about the classification of new techniques in plant breeding in the existing legal system has been going on for years. In the meantime, new methods for the targeted modification of the plant genome, in particular gene editing methods, are being used more and more. Against the background of the scientific, regulatory and societal discussion, we will discuss the topic "New breeding techniques" in the dialogue on February 27, 2017. The aim of the round table is to map the status quo of science and European and Austrian law.
Tested plant protection products make an important contribution to healthy plants, safe food and an intact environment. What criteria, test procedures and guidelines are used to assess potential risks to humans and non-target organisms? Who carries out the post-registration or application controls? And what are the challenges for food-secure and sustainable crop protection? Together with speakers from European and national authorities, we discussed the registration and evaluation of plant protection products in Austria and the EU on December 1, 2016.
Beans, peas, soy & Co are good for the soil, for the nutrition of humans and animals, and for the climate. Legumes should be one of several pillars of sustainable agriculture, but they are not. The degree of self-sufficiency in Austria is unsatisfactory. Large quantities of soybean meal have to be imported to compensate for the undersupply of domestic protein feed.
In the UN International Year of Pulses 2016, the Legumes Round Table on September 13, 2016, will focus on these important protein suppliers. We will discuss the importance of legumes in Austrian agriculture, their advantages and disadvantages as catch crop or greening and discuss solutions and strategies to improve the protein situation.
At the Seed Summit on April 12, 2016, concrete steps to strengthen bio- and agrobiodiversity were discussed and measures for the seed sector were derived. These relate in particular to the topics of biopatents and plant variety protection, new breeding techniques, freedom from genetic engineering - opportunities and challenges, seed from plant genetic resources (PGR), and organic seed and future breeding goals.
As part of the Future Crop Production dialog process, another round table on glyphosate was held on April 6, 2016 with participating stakeholders. The aim of the dialogue was to present the current status of the regular EU active substance review of glyphosate to the participants from science, NGOs, trade, industry, interest groups and producers, and to introduce and discuss new aspects.
Even after the UN International Year of Soil 2015, work for soil protection and soil health will continue intensively. Healthy and fertile soil not only provides us with food, but also regulates the water balance and the climate. The focus of the second round table on January 28, 2016 was therefore on the nutrients phosphorus and nitrogen, as well as their cycles. The presentations focused on agricultural soil management and sustainable crop production. The aim is to enable sustainable agriculture with high productivity and in consideration of environmental and climate protection.
Due to the broad public discussion in the context of the regular EU active substance review and the resulting health assessment, the first round table on September 30, 2015, dealt with the topic of glyphosate. This herbicide is used in agriculture to control weeds and is one of the most widely used active ingredients in crop protection products worldwide.
Last updated: 02.04.2025
automatically translated