
IEEP
18 Projects, page 1 of 4
Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2025 - 2030Partners:EARA, Gesellschaft für konservierende Bodenbearbeitung e. V. (GKB), University of Gloucestershire, IEEP, Slovenian Association for Conservation Agriculture (SACA) +14 partnersEARA,Gesellschaft für konservierende Bodenbearbeitung e. V. (GKB),University of Gloucestershire,IEEP,Slovenian Association for Conservation Agriculture (SACA),BOKU,Institute of Agriculture of the National Academy of Agrarian Science of Ukraine National Scientific Center,NCRSP,ASOCIACION AGRARIA JOVENES AGRICULTORES DE SEVILLA,University of Teramo,UL,UCO,University of Greenwich,USAMVCN,ECAF,BODEN.LEBEN,University of Évora,South Westphalia University of Applied Sciences,SPANISH CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE ASSOCIATION LIVING SOILSFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101218949Overall Budget: 11,766,000 EURFunder Contribution: 11,746,000 EURTRAILS4SOIL will co-create 5 Living Labs (LLs) across 9 European countries, encompassing 100 experimentation sites including 11 lighthouses. This initiative aims to address the urgent need for sustainable soil management in Europe by fostering stakeholder collaboration and overcoming barriers to the widespread implementation of better soil management farming systems. The project will develop pathways for implementing economic, policy, technical, and social measures to drive the transition towards a resilient and sustainable agri-food system grounded on healthy soils. Through innovative and participatory research in diverse agroecosystems, TRAILS4SOIL will demonstrate the potential of Regenerative and Conservation Agriculture Practices (ReCAP) to achieve the objectives of the EU Soil Mission. By actively engaging local communities in a multi-actor approach process TRAILS4SOIL will provide tailored scientific knowledge and technical guidelines, that will inspire and empower farmers and other stakeholders to promote sustainable land management improving soil health. The interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary expertise of the consortium, which includes 22 partners among universities, research centres and farmer associations, will ensure the achievement of the proposed objective. TRAILS4SOIL will advance the understanding of soil health by integrating cutting-edge technologies to facilitate the widespread adoption of sustainable soil management solutions.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2025 - 2030Partners:COMU, University of Twente, NWO-I, HFFA RESEARCH GMBH, ISRIC +20 partnersCOMU,University of Twente,NWO-I,HFFA RESEARCH GMBH,ISRIC,LG,Varda Foundation,Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries,CyI,WU,Euroquality,IRD,UAIC,University of Almería,University of Gloucestershire,CNRS,Fast Hazard,KUL,IEEP,ZALF,Cambisol,NIKU,UNIPD,Cardiff University,IRAFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101218843Overall Budget: 11,493,700 EURFunder Contribution: 11,493,700 EURErosion is a major threat to the ecosystemic services provided by soils, especially for nutrient cycling, provision of food, water purification, leading to significant on- and off-site effects that needs to be monitored, studied and prevented. EUROSION will tackle this issue by developing and demonstrating a dynamic soil erosion monitoring system able to continuously and precisely estimate soil erosion across spatial and temporal scales, considering water, wind and tillage effects in agricultural lands. This will be achieved with: (i) the creation of a robust multi-scale monitoring network composed of EUROSION partnership and representatives of complementary monitoring stakeholders, (ii) the elaboration of a monitoring scheme using harmonized monitoring methods allowing to collect up-to-date and reliable data, (iii) interrelated wind-water-tillage-related process-based erosion models capable of quantifying soil erosion from local to EU scale and across time and estimate the impact of management practices. These enhanced knowledge and innovative bricks will lead to the development of a user-friendly interactive and open-access platform for policymakers, researchers and monitoring stakeholders to visualize dynamic maps of erosion and conduct further research. Thus, EUROSION soil erosion monitoring system will deliver reliable estimates and validated indicators, on which the project will take stock to provide policymakers and agricultural land managers with recommendations on best management practices reducing soil erosion, supported by tailored cost-benefit analysis. EUROSION will also enable science-based trade-offs for the development and update of soil-related policies, including the new CAP. The project will run in close collaboration with local stakeholders, EU policymakers, and the JRC, and will be implemented in specific 12 Monitoring Nodes, representing European erosion hot spots and key agricultural areas.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2027Partners:ZRC SAZU, FHG, IEEP, ECOLE DES PONTS BUSINESS SCHOOL, INSTITUTO DE CIENCIAS SOCIAIS DA UNIVERSIDADE DE L +18 partnersZRC SAZU,FHG,IEEP,ECOLE DES PONTS BUSINESS SCHOOL,INSTITUTO DE CIENCIAS SOCIAIS DA UNIVERSIDADE DE L,TUW,AAU,MIO-ECSDE,CEE BANKWATCH NETWORK,CARINTHIA UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES,WECF,ICLEI EURO,STICHTING SLOW FOOD YOUTH NETWORK,ALDA,ENERGY CITIES,ARU,IIED,DRIFT,CEA ECONOMIC ALTERNATIVE SERVICES,UCG,GE PRIVATSTIFTUNG,MRI,ACENTOLINE COMUNICACION EDITORA SLFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101036640Overall Budget: 4,996,100 EURFunder Contribution: 4,996,100 EURThe Social sciences & Humanities for Achieving a Responsible, Equitable and Desirable GREEN DEAL (SHARED GREEN DEAL) project brings together 22 leading organisations from across the EU including 8 universities, 3 research institutions, 8 network organisations and 3 SMEs. Our network partners cover core elements of the European Green Deal cross cutting priorities such as civil society, democracy, gender, energy, environment, circular economy and innovation. Our objectives directly address the call challenge with an aim to share actions, understandings, evidence, insights, responsibilities and benefits across stakeholders including policymakers and civil society. Issues of inclusivity and diversity are at the heart of the project to particularly account for disadvantaged and vulnerable social groups. SHARED GREEN DEAL will meet its objectives through a set of 11 workpackages. It is structured around lessons from a set of 6 social experiments around 6 priority Green Deal topics. Each social experiment will be delivered across 4 member states. Importantly we take a transdisciplinary approach, covering 19 social science and humanities disciplines, with multi-stakeholder, practice-based and policy-science expertise, including gender studies as a key component throughout. The output includes the development of tools (e.g. an online Green Deal policy tracker), as well as translating project findings into stakeholder-specific policy briefs and roundtable events. The partners are committed to continuing to host the transnational network set up post-project to ensure longevity and impact beyond the life of the project. SHARED GREEN DEAL is expected to deliver changes in societal practices and in the behaviour of individuals, communities, and public and private organisations. Through the development of effective new strategies, we will address behavioural change and long-term commitment, trust, social acceptance and buy-in from people, communities and organisations.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2023 - 2027Partners:TUT, BWB CONNECT CLG, AIT, LGI, FRANKFURT SCHOOL OF FINANCE & MANAGEMENT GEMEINNUTZIGE GMBH +32 partnersTUT,BWB CONNECT CLG,AIT,LGI,FRANKFURT SCHOOL OF FINANCE & MANAGEMENT GEMEINNUTZIGE GMBH,RESILIENT CITIES NETWORK,KTH,CARTIF,OASC,RISE,ENERGY CITIES,TECNALIA,FHG,ICLEI EURO,STICHTING METABOLIC INSTITUTE,STICHTING CLIMATE-KIC INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION,Eurocities,UITP,Cerema,Demos Helsinki,IEEP,METABOLIC BV,Rupprecht Consult - Forschung & Beratung,The Democratic Society,Dark Matter Laboratories B.V.,CLIMATE-KIC HOLDING BV,TEKNOLOGIAN TUTKIMUSKESKUS VTT OY,EIT KIC URBAN MOBILITY SL,ERRIN,TNO,EIT URBAN MOBILITY FOUNDATION,UPM,SEI,Polytechnic University of Milan,Climate Alliance,REGEA NORTH-WEST CROATIA REGIONAL ENERGY AND CLIMATE AGENCY,Stowarzyszenie CRSFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101096678This FPA provides comprehensive programming and support for the European Commission’s Mission of 100 Climate-neutral and Smart Cities by 2030. It builds on the NetZeroCities (NZC) project, coordinated by CKIC. Combined, these two initiatives set out actions as follows: (a) Create and operate a Cities Mission Platform as a ‘one-stop-shop’ to access the expertise, capabilities, services, and solutions necessary to achieve climate neutrality. This Platform will provide tailored and intensive support to cities participating in the Mission and will ensure open access to the knowledge and resources of the Platform. (b) Help all Mission Cities with the co-creation and use of Climate City Contracts (CCC) to enable an ambitious pursuit of the goal of climate neutrality by 2030. This FPA expressly seeks to ensure all Mission Cities are supported and builds directly on the initial scope of NZC. In addition, support will be offered to additional cities seeking to follow closely the Mission. (c) Assist Mission cities in the development of tailor-made investment plans, project preparation and finance for the cities participating in the Mission; (d) Deliver substantial resources to Mission cities for ongoing research and innovation activities critical to achieving climate neutrality by 2030. This support will be in the form of ‘pilot’ funding to test and demonstrate actions needed to deliver climate neutral outcomes. This pilot activity will work together with the Platform and CCC processes in the cities, operationalizing emerging knowledge and insights about how cities can achieve the Mission objectives; and (e) Ensure ongoing monitoring and evaluation of cities in their progress toward climate neutrality and deploy peer-based learning to ensure full appropriability of the result from the Mission. The FPA periods extends through 2027 and provides for two planned Specific Grant Agreement (SGA) phases, where a precise plan, targets and metrics will be established.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2026Partners:IUCNEUROPEAN UNION REPRESENTATIVE OFFICE, Regionalis Tudaskozpont Kft, NUC, EMÜ, JRC +22 partnersIUCNEUROPEAN UNION REPRESENTATIVE OFFICE,Regionalis Tudaskozpont Kft,NUC,EMÜ,JRC,HUN-REN CENTRE FOR ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH,NKU,EAER,Royal Holloway University of London,UNSPMF,Lund University,University of Novi Sad,CSIC,Pensoft Publishers (Bulgaria),CWNU,IEEP,INRAE,UFZ,University of Reading,University of Würzburg,Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres,UBB,ELO ASBL,WU,University of Mons,UNIPD,SLUFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101003476Overall Budget: 7,850,400 EURFunder Contribution: 5,350,400 EURWild pollinators are a key part of European biodiversity and provide a wide range of benefits to crops, wild plants, and human wellbeing. In Europe and globally, wild pollinators are facing multiple threats, however, the full extent of declines, their complex causes, and the most effective ways to respond to them are not well understood. Safeguard brings together world-leading researchers, NGOs, industry and policy experts to substantially contribute to Europe’s capacity to reverse the losses of wild pollinators. Safeguard will significantly expand current assessments of the status and trends of European wild pollinators including bees, butterflies, flies and other pollinating insects. We will use state-of-the-art models to predict the impacts of pressures on pollinators, paying particular attention to emerging threats, multiple and interacting drivers, long-term and cumulative effects, and multiple spatial scales. Safeguard will establish empirical research for a systematic multi-scale assessment of multiple pressures on pollinators and the context-dependent effectiveness of interventions. Working with our stakeholders, we will provide an improved understanding of the diverse values of European pollinators, and develop and test new approaches using multiple interventions to benefit pollinators, from field to landscape scales across agricultural, natural, and urban systems. We will co-develop with stakeholders an integrated assessment framework and tools that incorporate multiple types of evidence to address pollinator declines and direct mitigation strategies at the local, national, and EU levels. Safeguard will use the significant advance in knowledge to inform national, European, and global policies and decision-making. Finally, Safeguard will increase awareness of wild pollinators and their societal values with the public, policy makers, scientists, industry, and NGOs, to mobilise concerted multiple actions towards reversing pollinator declines across Europe.
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