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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumEurope's food systems are locked in, but researchers may have found the keys
https://www.inrae.fr/en/news/europes-food-systems-are-locked-researchers-may-have-found-keysTime has come for a greener, healthier and more resilient and competitive food system. Yet the transformation is progressing slowly. Our ways of producing and consuming food are locked into structures that are difficult to change, according to researchers behind a new article in Nature Food. Here, they explain why and what it will take to move forward. The article represents the first scientific output from a new European research alliance.
Published on 03 June 2026
Europes agrifood system is under severe pressure. Climate change is causing droughts and floods, and agriculture is putting pressure on nature, the climate and the environment. Diet‑related lifestyle diseases are placing a growing burden on healthcare systems. At the same time, agriculture is expected to deliver affordable food, climate action, biodiversity and food security all at once while maintaining competitiveness in a global market.
On paper, ambitions are high. The EUs Green Deal and the Member States national climate plans all point towards a comprehensive transformation. In practice, however, progress is very slow. Many of the same problems persist year after year.
Five principles to move Europe forward
The researchers do not stop at describing the problems as they see them today. As something new, they also take the next step and propose solutions in the form of five principles that can guide policymakers, businesses and civil society, so that the necessary transformation of Europes food system does not stall:
Olesen, J.E., de Steenhuijsen Piters, B., Nicklaus, S. et al. Principles for guiding and unlocking transformation of the European Union agrifood system. Nat Food (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-026-01360-xPublished on 03 June 2026
Europes agrifood system is under severe pressure. Climate change is causing droughts and floods, and agriculture is putting pressure on nature, the climate and the environment. Diet‑related lifestyle diseases are placing a growing burden on healthcare systems. At the same time, agriculture is expected to deliver affordable food, climate action, biodiversity and food security all at once while maintaining competitiveness in a global market.
On paper, ambitions are high. The EUs Green Deal and the Member States national climate plans all point towards a comprehensive transformation. In practice, however, progress is very slow. Many of the same problems persist year after year.
Five principles to move Europe forward
The researchers do not stop at describing the problems as they see them today. As something new, they also take the next step and propose solutions in the form of five principles that can guide policymakers, businesses and civil society, so that the necessary transformation of Europes food system does not stall:
- Prioritising access to healthy, sustainable and affordable food
- Including all actors in transformation processes, also those who risk losing out
- Creating accountable and transparent processes and decision‑making
- Using Europes diversity in agrifood systems as a strength
- Shifting mindsets to a focus on prioritizing common goods
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Europe's food systems are locked in, but researchers may have found the keys (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
9 hrs ago
OP
bucolic_frolic
(56,052 posts)1. It sounds great but changing a system is slow amidst tradeoffs
Minimize impact, improve outcomes, produce more food, distribute the pain slowly and in small amounts.
Floods, droughts need taming. Banking floods for dry seasons.
Maybe longer growing seasons will help? Would sure help Britain.
Use local farms if there are any remaining.
OKIsItJustMe
(22,256 posts)2. The researchers describe this as a paradox
Somewhat like "belling the cat everyone agrees that it's got to be done, but, actually doing it presents a challenge.