Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.


Info

Purpose: Enable users to quickly understand what your stand is about.

Instructions:

  1. Click on in the upper left to open the page to add and modify content.
  2. Write a few sentences in the Excerpt box below that introduce the topic of your stand and the main points you will address. You will see the box as soon as you edit the page.
  3. Click on at the lower right to save your change.



Excerpt

EJP Soil: Building a cross-European framework for climate-smart sustainable agricultural soil management systems

24 countries join forces in the European Joint Programme EJP SOIL. The overall objective is to provide sustainable agricultural soil management solutions that contribute to key societal challenges including climate change and future food supply.

EJP Soil launched its 1st External Call „Towards Healthy, Resilient and Sustainable Agricultural Soils“ - Call Announcement V1.2 10 May 2021 (see below, in "Presentation" heading)

The EJP SOIL programme has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 652615

CIRCASA Project: Coordination of International Research Cooperation on Soil Carbon Sequestration in Agriculture

The CIRCASA project aims to develop international synergies concerning research and knowledge exchange in the field of carbon sequestration in agricultural soils at the European Union and global levels. This H2020 project was launched in 2017 with a duration of 3 years and has 22 partners from 17 countries all around the world who bring a uniquely dense network of scientific expertise. The project also benefits from the close participation and collaboration with the research secretariats of the “4 per 1000 initiative”, Global Research Alliance (GRA), the Joint Programming Initiative on Sustainable Agriculture, Food Security and Climate Change (FACCE-JPI), and the FAO  Global Soil Partnership.

The CIRCASA project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 774378