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NERC’s future research in Sustainable Agriculture

NERC’s future research in Sustainable Agriculture. SSAP meeting 15/16 January 2007 Faith Culshaw. Sustainable agriculture research. Current/ ongoing research examples NERC’s developing strategy Living with Environmental Change initiative. Science for a Sustainable Future, 2002-07.

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NERC’s future research in Sustainable Agriculture

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  1. NERC’s future research in Sustainable Agriculture SSAP meeting 15/16 January 2007 Faith Culshaw

  2. Sustainable agriculture research • Current/ ongoing research examples • NERC’s developing strategy • Living with Environmental Change initiative

  3. Science for a Sustainable Future, 2002-07 • Sustainable economies: energy, land use and hazard mitigation • Examples: • impacts of alternative land management scenarios on biodiversity • development of integrated models of environmental, economic and land use change • sustainability of new farming systems, eg GM and non-food crops • land management strategies to mitigate the effects of climate change

  4. Sustainable Agriculture: Current and ongoing research examples • Responsive mode grants – 35 (~£4.6m); e.g. impacts of pesticides; diffuse pollution from agriculture • RELU (cross-Council programme) themes: • integration of land and water use • environmental basis of rural development • sustainable food chains • economic and social interactions with the rural environment • Towards a Sustainable Energy Economy – UK Energy Research Centre • -biomass supply chains; environmental factors eg water dependency • QUEST – new funding announcement: • -sustainable forestry & bio-energy

  5. Sustainable agriculture research: CEH examples • Countryside Survey • BUZZ/BIG BEE project

  6. What is Countryside Survey? • World standard audit of the UK’s rural environment, repeated every 8-10 years. • Robust estimates of ‘stock’ and change of: • Land Cover, landscape features • Habitats • Vegetation • Freshwater quality • Soils • Enables understanding of causes of change • Policy and science driven: • Defra, SEERAD, EN(NE), CCW, SNH, FC, JNCC, NAW, DoE(NI), EC • NERC • Core of CEH Theme on “Monitoring sustainability and management of land resources”

  7. Countryside Survey Why are we doing it? To find out how the countryside has changed, and why, since the surveys began in 1978 and especially since the last survey in 2000. How will it help the countryside? Countryside Survey tells us about the ‘stock’ and condition of habitats in the countryside today - how much there is and where it is found. The information is used to help plan the management of the countryside for the future and protect the biodiversity or variety of plants and animals within our landscape.

  8. What does the survey consist of? a detailed Field Survey of habitats and featuresa Land Cover Map of the UK, on a field-by-field scale using satellite information. Distribution of GB survey sites for Countryside Survey.

  9. Countryside Survey data are used for: • Prescriptions for sustainable rural land management under CAP reform • Monitoring for Priority Habitat Action Plans for arable field margins, hedgerows and some upland habitats • Data management of agro-environment work and associated temporal and spatial modelling • Update of the Government’s indicators on landscape features and plant diversity • Determining the impacts of nitrogen and acid deposition • Determining the quality of freshwater and soil resources • Development of hedgerow legislation, to encourage management, planting and protection • Capacity for renewable energy production

  10. 1 2 3 6 4 5 BUZZ: Five Year Research and Technology Transfer Project – Current Project BIGBEE (on bumblebees) • Examine impacts of environmental enhancement on a wide range of taxa • Test the reproducibility of effects at several locations (government and industry support on arable farms) • Formulate and test new Agri-environment Scheme options (now part of official schemes) • Transfer scientific knowledge to the user-community (training via Farmed Environment Company) • BIGBEE looking at how landscape type affects pollinator population dynamics – principlesuseful for designing more sustainable agriculture across UK at field to landscape scales

  11. NERC’s next Strategy Science themes • Forecasting and mitigation of natural hazards • Environment, pollution and human health • Biodiversity • Climate systems • Sustainable use of natural resources and two cross-cutting themes: • Earth System Science • Technologies

  12. NERC’s next Strategy Biodiversity • Whole ecosystem approach identified as unifying concept for this theme. • Key high level challenge covering: • Biodiversity functions and resilienceThe role of biodiversity in key ecosystem functions. • Influence of environmental changeThe effects of environmental change on genes, populations, species and communities. • Integrated tools for valuing the environment

  13. NERC’s next Strategy Sustainable Use of Natural Resources • Energy • Focus on clean energy. • Environmental impacts of new technology. • Soil and water research

  14. NERC’s next Strategy Environment Pollution and Human Health • Measurement and distribution of pollutants and pathogens at all time and space scales. • Development of sensors > Capacity to monitor in real time to understand the exposure of humans to contaminants. • Examples would be developingmethods for monitoring:- air quality at high resolution- soil, sediment and water quality remotely in real time

  15. NERC’s next Strategy Next steps • Development of the public facing document • Consultation on this draft strategy Feb ’07 • Approval by Council Jun ’07 • Launch the strategy Sep ’07.

  16. New Science Securing Resilient Ecosystem Services for the Future Living With Environmental Change Natural Resources Water Soil Oceans Air Rocks Biodiversity Human well-being Shelter Transport Security Chemicals Health Education Ecosystem Services Food and Fibre Water supply Energy and Minerals Disease & climate regulation Amenity

  17. Living With Environmental Change Major national/international policy drivers: HMT Public Policy Challenge 5 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Stern Review of Economics of Climate Change Increasing pressures on our natural resources and global climate from rapid economic and population growth in the developing world and sustained demand for fossil fuels in advanced economies Unsustainable consumption of resources Need evidence to plan now for inevitable changes

  18. Living With Environmental Changewill meet TC5 by providing the required predictive science, solutions and business opportunities to increase resilience to, and reduce the economic costs of, environmental changes such as more severe weather and reduced biodiversity. • HOW:It will do so through whole-system (natural, engineering, social & economic) predictions and analyses of environmental changes and their impacts: • on local and seasonal–decadal scales; • on natural resources, life-quality & infrastructures • to inform choices of mitigation and adaptation responses PARTNERSHIP: The whole system approach demands a 10-year strategic research partnership between Research Councils, Govt and other users. Agreed partners: NERC,ESRC, EPSRC, BBSRC, MRC, Defra, DfID, Met Office, SEERAD (others in discussion: EA, DCLG, DfT, Microsoft)

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