During the first reporting period, Soil-X-Change advanced substantially in consolidating scientific evidence and technical tools for sustainable soil management. A harmonised methodology, adapted from WOCAT, was implemented across partner countries to collect, evaluate, and systematise practices. Using this framework, partners documented 61 sustainable soil management practices from 11 countries, representing a diverse set of site-specific, input-efficient, and soil health-friendly approaches. Of these, 24 were pre-selected by the Knowledge Board and 18 will be demonstrated in the next phase of the project.
In parallel, the consortium implemented two large-scale multilingual surveys. The Operational Group survey engaged 141 OGs across consortium countries, analysing their set-up, functioning, and barriers to effective knowledge transfer. The farmer survey collected 391 responses from 13 countries, surpassing the original target of 300. These data provide robust insights into adoption gaps, awareness levels, and constraints related to soil-friendly practices.
A modular, interoperable database was developed to manage documented practices and feed into the interactive Dashboard. The Dashboard integrates geospatial data, comparison charts, impact scales, and a decision-support tool, allowing farmers, advisors, and policymakers to visualise and assess sustainable practices. The technical architecture supports interoperability with EU-FarmBook and future integration into AKIS systems.
At the scientific-technical interface, the project also initiated preparatory work for farm demonstrations and a novel cost-benefit analysis methodology based on stakeholder mental mapping, designed to capture both economic and socio-ecological trade-offs of sustainable practices. In addition, strong synergies with more than 30 EU projects have been initiated, enabling methodological exchanges and alignment of impact pathways.
Expected outcomes at project end include a validated set of demonstration practices tested in real farm contexts, cost-benefit and impact analyses of these practices, adaptation pathways to support their scaling across Europe, and an operational Dashboard serving as an open-access decision-support and knowledge-sharing tool for thousands of farmers, advisors, and policymakers.