Agricultural production in Europe relies on the use of chemical-synthetic pesticides to control pests and ensure the production of high-quality food and feed. Adverse external effects of intensive agriculture are exacerbating the loss of biodiversity, the deterioration of water quality and negative impacts on human health. To-date, Integrated Pest management (IPM) and in particular direct control tactics, are well developed. However, the adoption of combinations of tactics in a system approach, which can lead to a reduction of pesticide use, is still lacking in the farming community.
The objective of FORTUNA is to address future challenges for agriculture and in particular, pest control, in the light of reducing the overall risk and use of chemical pesticides, and the use of more hazardous pesticides by 50% by 2030 (F2F Strategy). By improving the understanding of the barriers, drivers and knowledge gaps that affect the uptake of research results, and by identifying research needs, FORTUNA responds to the ambition to pave the way towards agricultural production without the use of chemical pesticides in the long term.
The specific objectives are to:
- build a large stakeholder network with a wide range of concerned stakeholders along the food and supply chain to gather and evaluate practical insights and to facilitate an exchange of knowledge across Europe promoting a reduction in pesticide use and risk,
- map and identify innovative solutions available to farmers to-date as well as challenges for their uptake,
- improve understanding of main knowledge gaps as well as of drivers and barriers by analysing solutions and combinations of methods for their wide spread adoption as well as in the landscape context and the context of climate change and their readiness to go beyond the Farm to Fork targets for chemical pesticides
- identify research needs for further reductions or phasing out chemical pesticides in agriculture.
Recommendations for future research priorities to reduce or phase out the use of chemical pesticides in agriculture will explore natural science research, innovations in knowledge and information systems, and public policies to support the transition as well as the upstream and downstream supply chains, seeking to develop a Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (SRIA) that reaches towards a pesticide-free agriculture.