European consumer and societal stakeholders' response to crop improvements and new plant breeding techniques

Nair, Abhishek and Fischer, Arnout R. H. and Moscatelli, Silvana and Socaciu, Carmen and Kohl, Christian and Stetkiewicz, Stacia S. and Menary, Jonathan and Baekelandt, Alexandra and Nanda, Amrit K. and Jorasch, Petra and Davies, Jessica A. C. and Wilhelm, Ralf (2023) European consumer and societal stakeholders' response to crop improvements and new plant breeding techniques. Food and Energy Security, 12 (1): e417. ISSN 2048-3694

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Abstract

The global demand for providing nutritious, sustainable, and safe diets for a 10 billion population by 2050 while preserving affordability, reducing environmental impacts, and adapting to climate change will require accelerating the transition to sustainable agri‐food systems. A plausible way to help tackle these challenges is by developing new plant varieties that have improved crop yield, plant nutritional quality, and sustainability (or resilience) traits. However, stakeholders, consumers, and citizens' concerns and appreciation of future‐proofing crops and the acceptability of new plant breeding strategies are not well‐established. These groups are actors in the agri‐food systems, and their views, values, needs, and expectations are crucial in helping to co‐design fair, ethical, acceptable, sustainable, and socially desirable policies on new plant breeding techniques (NPBTs) and the transition to sustainable agri‐food systems. In this study, we engaged with consumer experts and societal stakeholders to consider their perceptions, expectations, and acceptability of improving crops and NPBTs for future‐proofing the agri‐food systems. Our analysis points to a need for governments to take a proactive role in regulating NPBTs, ensure openness and transparency in breeding new crop varieties, and inform consumers about the effects of these breeding programmes and the risks and benefits of the new crop varieties developed. Consumer experts and societal stakeholders considered these strategies necessary to instil confidence in society about NPBTs and accelerate the transition to sustainable agri‐food systems.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Food and Energy Security
Subjects:
?? original articleoriginal articlesacceptabilitybiotechnologyfood securityrisk perception ??
ID Code:
177095
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
07 Oct 2022 16:00
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
09 Oct 2024 10:26