Policy Interventions Promoting Sustainable Food- and Feed-Systems: A Delphi Study of Legume Production and Consumption
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Delphi Method
- Enable contributions of opinions from a panel of geographically dispersed policy experts and stakeholders;
- Reach a common understanding of the legume policy incoherencies across sectors; and
- Help opinion formation to identify policy instruments to leverage barriers for legume production and consumption.
2.1.1. Round 1
- (a)
- What are the policy challenges to increase domestic legume production and consumption?
- (b)
- Why are legume cultivation and consumption rates relatively low in Europe?
- (c)
- Which policies would lead to more legumes in our food system?
- (d)
- What are the most effective policy mixes to forge pathways towards legume-supported food and feed systems?
2.1.2. Round 2
- (1)
- Legal measures to reduce the use of synthetic N fertilizer use (i.e., allowances for farmers).
- (2)
- Increased environmental, safety, and ethical standards for imported raw protein sources.
- (3)
- Funds for public–private extension plus research and development (R&D) services supporting legume-supported cropping systems.
- (4)
- Support for investments in technology (including breeding and agrotechnology), storage, and processing.
- (5)
- Climate measures related to food consumption e.g., tax on meat, ban on red meat.
- (6)
- Dietary guidelines and healthcare recommendations on why and how to shift to a (more) plant-based diet.
- (7)
- Elimination of the CAP.
- (1)
- How fast do you expect the proposed policy instruments to be implemented?
- (2)
- Is it an incremental policy change, or rather a radical shift in policy that could lead to the implementation of the policy instruments you envisaged?
- (3)
- What could be the role of various institutions (public and state institutions, large and small business, and bottom-up civic initiatives) to induce policy change?
2.2. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Round 1
3.2. Round 2
4. Discussion of the Policy Scenarios
4.1. Eliminate the CAP
4.2. Climate Measures
4.3. Regulating the Use of Inorganic N Fertilizers
4.4. Agricultural Extension Services
4.5. Nutrition, Diet, and Health Policies
4.6. Investing in Research and Development (R&D)
4.7. Reforming Trade Policies
5. Summary: Forging Pathways towards a More Sustainable, Legume-Based Agriculture
6. Conclusions
- Implementing policies that encourage reduced use of inorganic N fertilizer is an important step towards a shift in the increased cultivation of legumes. It is not clear to what extent this would create an impact on the consumption of legumes.
- Investment in R&D, agricultural extension services, and knowledge transfer is necessary to support the point above and allow for a smooth transition from high use of synthetic N fertilizer in conventional agriculture to precision farming and agroecological farming.
- Mitigation and adaptation strategies to combat climate change can have an indirect positive effect on legume production and consumption if these policies are implemented on a large scale and effectively.
- Policies that tackle nutrition, health, and diet are relevant for the increase in legume consumption and, indirectly, legume production. However, preferences, culinary traditions, and cultural habits are difficult to change with top-down approaches or via promotional and information campaigns.
- Citizen-led initiatives that inform and educate the public on the environmental and health benefits of legume consumption should accompany policies that tackle production and farming strategies (i.e., greening payments with other agroecological and rural development incentives, etc.).
- The CAP is an important tool to support food production and protection of the natural environment, and of which the farm is a key component for the creation of any positive externalities. Hence, the CAP needs to be reoriented.
- Trade agreements are part of a complex web of interconnections between economies around the world, and any intervention will have repercussions along the food chain in general; therefore, this possibility is not advocated for.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Diagram of Codes Used for Text Analysis
- Explanation of Appendix A
Appendix B. Extract of Codes for Each Category
- Category: Economic
Code | Case | Text | Number of Words | % Words |
Competition | Eliminate CAP | Such a radical shift would drive many European farmers out of business and would have an impact on food supply within Europe | 22 | 2.30% |
Competition | Eliminate CAP | The fact that European land resources are substantially lower than those of other continents and the unfair commerce practises | 19 | 2.00% |
Costs | Eliminate CAP | Farmers may look for lower even more their production costs (lower their N input usually in excess in wet areas) better cropping practices and many will not be part time farmers. | 31 | 3.20% |
Competition | Eliminate CAP | Farmers may look for lower even more their production costs (lower their N input usually in excess in wet areas) better cropping practices and many will not be part time farmers. | 31 | 3.20% |
Marketing | Eliminate CAP | Then production would be driven only by the market, which is not good for sustainability | 15 | 1.60% |
Incentives | Eliminate CAP | Parts of the current CAP have positive impacts (e.g., AE funding | 12 | 1.30% |
Competition | Eliminate CAP | The market will drive production | 8 | 0.80% |
Value chain | Eliminate CAP | Would mean that the cheapest value chains will drive most of the production and consequently consumption | 16 | 1.70% |
Costs | Eliminate CAP | Cost production must be reduced | 5 | 0.50% |
Incentives | Eliminate CAP | Point is retail focus is still profit driven. and cash to shareholders. if there is no money to the farm, why would you farm at all. | 26 | 2.70% |
Competition | Eliminate CAP | Point is retail focus is still profit driven. and cash to shareholders. if there is no money to the farm, why would you farm at all. | 26 | 2.70% |
Costs | Eliminate CAP | Stopping subsidies without making prices saying the truth as well for local as for externally produced feed and food will most likely reduce the sustainability, i.e., the ability to survive for most agriculture as it is cheaper to produce outside Europe | 42 | 4.40% |
Competition | Eliminate CAP | Stopping subsidies without making prices saying the truth as well for local as for externally produced feed and food will most likely reduce the sustainability, i.e., the ability to survive for most agriculture as it is cheaper to produce outside Europe | 42 | 4.40% |
Costs | Eliminate CAP | Elimination of subsidy would have a massive effect on all of agriculture and would force those that remain in production to adopt least cost production methods | 26 | 2.70% |
Trade | Climate measures | Will countries import meat and dairy from outside? | 8 | 0.80% |
Competition | Climate measures | I can also imagine that in a more competitive market for cereals and vegetables it may become advantageous to apply cheap mineral fertilizer (produced with cheap excess wind power) rather than introducing unreliable legumes in the crop rotation | 38 | 4.00% |
Investment | Climate measures | This would demand a rapid investment in processing capacities for meat and dairy replacements | 14 | 1.50% |
Incentives | Climate measures | Somewhat positive impact, but generally stronger dis/incentives are needed regarding home-grown legumes and their competition with cheap protein imports | 21 | 2.20% |
Costs | Climate measures | Politically this is not feasible. The changes in lifestyle and food production would increase food costs significantly and be unsustainable. | 20 | 2.10% |
Competition | Agricultural extension services | Question remains whether they are financially competitive. | 7 | 0.80% |
Competition | Agricultural extension services | Question remains whether they are financially competitive | 7 | 0.80% |
Costs | Agricultural extension services | Cost of their raw materials is increased | 7 | 0.80% |
Incentives | Agricultural extension services | This is a crucial point. Recovering these services will have an impact if demand, prices, consumption run parallel | 18 | 2.10% |
Value chain | Agricultural extension services | Sharing of the added value all along the value chain | 10 | 1.10% |
Demand | Agricultural extension services | Advisors will generally increase their interest with the increased exposure to the crop and demand for advice. | 17 | 1.90% |
Incentives | Agricultural extension services | Their education will not necessarily in itself drive increased production. Growers preferably need to be able to make money from any crop or be made/encouraged to grow them for environmental/sustainability objective reasons | 34 | 3.90% |
Trade | Regulating synthetic N use | Maybe in increase of cheaper imports | 6 | 0.40% |
Demand | Regulating synthetic N use | Legume production is primarily linked to demand and prices. | 9 | 0.50% |
Costs | Nutrition, diet, and health | I would expect education to have a marginal impact on demand | 14 | 1.50% |
Marketing | Nutrition, diet, and health | New market for quality pulses which will increase demand | 9 | 0.90% |
Investment | Nutrition, diet, and health | At present this is likely to be supplied by North American producers rather than EU farmers as the R&D is not being undertaken by EU based organisations. Major investment in this area being made in Canada and US by food companies supported by public funds. | 46 | 4.80% |
Incentives | R&D | What sort of incentives will be allowed to farmers (such as participation schemes?) | 16 | 1.40% |
Demand | R&D | Mainly its profitability for farmers | 5 | 0.40% |
Investment | R&D | Investment in legume crop development at the farm level is needed urgently. | 12 | 1.10% |
Investment | R&D | Investment in new and novel processing will create market demand and the opportunity for growers to profit by supplying new markets with added value. I see investment in new varieties of legumes as important | 34 | 3.00% |
Demand | Trade policy | It would improve their place in the market | 7 | 0.50% |
Costs | Trade policy | Perhaps they would be happy to pay this cost | 9 | 0.70% |
Competition | Trade policy | Increased environmental, safety and ethical standards for imported raw protein sources will inevitably raise the competitiveness of homegrown legumes. | 19 | 1.40% |
Competition | Trade policy | Competitiveness of EU legumes | 4 | 0.30% |
Trade | Trade policy | Legume exporter for food towards countries able to pay for. | 10 | 0.70% |
Competition | Trade policy | It will potentially increase competitiveness of prices of EU legumes. fact is many classes for food consumption are not sufficiently grown in Europe today. | 24 | 1.80% |
Trade | Trade policy | This means trade barriers and restrictions on imports of products that do not meet the standards. This will only impact the EU production if the barriers can be made to stick and the cost of meeting the standards is so high that they cannot be overcome without cost implications that make the imports economically uncompetitive. For this lack of clarity, I have not ranked the +/− effect. | 66 | 4.90% |
- Category: Social
Code | Case | Text | Number of Words | % Words |
Complexity | Eliminate CAP | There are too many influences linked with that. Hard to say anything about impact | 14 | 1.50% |
Complexity | Eliminate CAP | A huge agri-food turmoil is to be expected | 8 | 0.80% |
Complexity | Eliminate CAP | If ALL subsidies would be cut, we would get a revolution. There would be no essential impact on legume production | 20 | 2.10% |
Consumption | Agricultural extension services | For consumption there should be no impact. For a sustainable agriculture a better knowledge and entrance to resources would have a bigger impact. | 23 | 2.60% |
Consumption | Regulating synthetic N use | Synthetic N might give a mild push to legume production but none to consumption, as several other commentators have noted | 20 | 1.20% |
Consumption | Regulating synthetic N use | Then, since they would be more readily available in the EU market, their consumption would increase at a second step | 20 | 1.20% |
Preferences | Regulating synthetic N use | Increasing legume consumption as foods is a harder business as it requires a substantial increase in many European countries and a change in dietary habits which usually takes a rather long time to occur | 34 | 2.10% |
Preferences | Regulating synthetic N use | To increase consumption is also necessary to make awareness raising campaigns | 11 | 0.70% |
Consumption | Regulating synthetic N use | Will people consume more pulses directly as food?–probably yes BUT not due to the measures posed in this question | 20 | 1.20% |
Consumption | Regulating synthetic N use | Consumers ask already today for healthy legumes; a more vegetarian diet will increase and with that the consumption of legumes | 20 | 1.20% |
Consumption | Regulating synthetic N use | Improvement/increases in consumption is likely, in that production can be a driver for consumption in the case of legumes, i.e., increased production has the potential to increase consumption | 30 | 1.80% |
Preferences | Nutrition, diet, and health | If calories-intake is to be reduced this could mean less meat not necessarily more legumes. Humans like and eat food not only because of its nutritional value but because they enjoy the taste, flavour, and texture etc. I think people are more willing to change their diet slightly for a greater environmental benefit than for personal health. | 58 | 6.10% |
Preferences | Nutrition, diet, and health | The question is how to get it into consumer hands and then how to get them to use it. Mild positives in both axes as the outcome would be reduced consumption of animal products, with all of its on-costs, and mild increases in plant-protein production. | 47 | 4.90% |
Complexity | Nutrition, diet, and health | I think the measures suggested are important to increase the awareness of the health and environmental benefits related to increased legume food consumption for individuals. However, it is not enough to lead to significant changes in consumption patterns | 38 | 4.00% |
Cultural Barriers | Nutrition, diet, and health | We need to have a bigger variety of legume foods at market and they need to fit into the local food culture and have favourable sensory properties. | 27 | 2.80% |
Tradition | Nutrition, diet, and health | It would be important to route legumes and legume-supported foods into cultures in forms that were very tasty and in-line with their cultural expectations. | 30 | 3.10% |
Tradition | Nutrition, diet, and health | Under confinement in Spain the increase in the use of grain legumes in the diets has increased significantly: the reason that was given was mainly parents or families had more time for cooking. so the demand is there built in the traditions and also nowadays the gourmet approaches | 48 | 5.00% |
Heatlh | Nutrition, diet, and health | Proteins especially legumes in human diets will increase significantly over the next 10 years. They will not only be a source of protein but provide healthier forms of carbohydrate, fibre, mineral and vitamins | 33 | 3.50% |
Heatlh | Nutrition, diet, and health | Dietary guidelines on reduction of meat consumption and increase of pulses have already shown to have impact on consumption and therewith on public health. | 24 | 2.50% |
Consumption | Nutrition, diet, and health | Dietary guidelines on reduction of meat consumption and increase of pulses have already shown to have impact on consumption and therewith on public health. | 24 | 2.50% |
Consumption | Nutrition, diet, and health | Consumer education and awareness campaigns have already led to increased consumption | 11 | 1.20% |
- Category: Environmental
Code | Case | Text | Words | % Words |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | So environmental standards would still be in effect, but farmers are not compensated? I think this would lead to economically efficient large-scale agriculture with little regard to biodiversity. | 29 | 3.00% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | Positive effects on sustainability. So far, it has had a little positive effect on legume production after the 2013 reforms that followed decades of negative effects whether intended or not | 30 | 3.10% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | It would make the abandonment of subsidies to threat of EU agriculture sustainability. | 12 | 1.30% |
Externalities | Eliminate CAP | I think global food prices are not determined by the true costs of production but nearly every nation subsides food production somewhat | 22 | 2.30% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | Which is not good for sustainability | 6 | 0.60% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | Other parts are totally counterproductive in many ways (e.g., subsidies without a clear social or environmental benefit | 18 | 1.90% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | A thought about eliminating subsidies, but their careful deployment can be vital for ecological regeneration | 15 | 1.60% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | Sustainability might be improved | 5 | 0.50% |
Climate change | Eliminate CAP | Add the climate change with more crop failures. you will probably rule out farming | 14 | 1.50% |
Externalities | Eliminate CAP | The question is how to make prices say the truth AND at the same time make sure that production will be massively reduced | 23 | 2.40% |
Climate change | Eliminate CAP | However, climate change may work in our favour as other regions will suffer even more from climate change than central Europe and then it may be realistic to make the prices say the truth | 34 | 3.60% |
Fertilizer | Eliminate CAP | Which would involve the much greater use of legumes to provide N and improve soil fertility. The shock would be huge, right along the value chain. | 26 | 2.70% |
Sustainability | Eliminate CAP | Which would involve the much greater use of legumes to provide N and improve soil fertility. The shock would be huge, right along the value chain. | 26 | 2.70% |
Sustainability | Climate measures | What effects is this going to have on smallholders in other countries (increased pressure on land? more pollution of water and deterioration of soil?) The question should not be whether meat and dairy should be produced or not but rather in which forms? What kind of production systems can be rated sustainable | 52 | 5.40% |
Integrated/diversified farming | Climate measures | Mixed, diverse production systems rate higher in this regard and they are also more resilient. But animals are an important part of such systems. | 24 | 2.50% |
Biodiversity | Climate measures | I am very uncertain about my answer, but my feeling is there is going to be a negative effect on legumes and overall sustainability by such a radical move. Sustainability will decrease because biodiversity associated with temporary and permanent grasslands will drastically decrease. | 44 | 4.60% |
Fertilizer | Climate measures | It may be advantageous to apply cheap mineral fertilizer (produced with cheap excess wind power) rather than introducing unreliable legumes in the crop rotation. If legumes have become a reliable source of income by then, more legumes would be used (maybe also due to a high demand for products replacing meat and dairy | 51 | 5.30% |
Sustainability | Climate measures | In such a case there would be a positive effect on production but a mild effect on sustainability | 18 | 1.90% |
Sustainability | Climate measures | Banning meat and dairy consumption altogether is not the solution for our environmental problems and might even have a negative impact on sustainability | 23 | 2.40% |
Biodiversity | Climate measures | On the other hand, we need grazing animals to use pastures (we cannot use cellulose) and crops that will not produce in dry years. | 24 | 2.50% |
Carbon sequestration | Climate measures | Animal production plays a role and C sequestration too. | 14 | 1.50% |
Sustainability | Climate measures | Again, scored on production as the studies undertaken on choice experiments have shown that what consumers say they do and how they behave are very different. Again, similar concerns with sustainability metrics as outlined in previous answers. | 37 | 3.90% |
Sustainability | Climate measures | Consumption would inevitably increase because animal protein sources are missing. Production would increase accordingly. But the sustainability would be negative, because (a) it would not be political realistic to reach such restrictions and (b) there are too many regions which depend on milk and meat production–also to keep the traditional cultural landscapes with their biodiversity | 56 | 5.90% |
Sustainability | Climate measures | Some ecosystem services, including those required for legume production, can benefit from non-intensive livestock industries. Without legume-source livestock feed, production would necessarily decrease. | 25 | 2.60% |
Sustainability | Agricultural extension services | Sustainability at landscape scale and beyond. | 7 | 0.80% |
Sustainability | Agricultural extension services | Aspects since sustainability depends. | 4 | 0.50% |
Sustainability | Agricultural extension services | Transforming EU agriculture; therefore, they would result in improving legume production and agriculture sustainability. | 14 | 1.60% |
Fertilizer | Agricultural extension services | Agrochemical (especially fertiliser) suppliers. | 4 | 0.50% |
Sustainability | Agricultural extension services | Higher impact on sustainability, legumes production and consumption are not directly affected. | 12 | 1.40% |
Externalities | Regulating synthetic N use | Restrictions on pesticide use would also be needed. | 8 | 0.50% |
Biodiversity | Regulating synthetic N use | Towards more integrated and diverse systems and would support biodiversity, water quality, soil quality etc. at the same time. | 19 | 1.20% |
Integrated/diversified farming | Regulating synthetic N use | Towards more integrated and diverse systems and would support biodiversity, water quality, soil quality etc. at the same time. | 19 | 1.20% |
Integrated/diversified farming | Regulating synthetic N use | Geographical redistribution of livestock farming (or more likely increase of slurry trafficking). | 13 | 0.80% |
Sustainability | Regulating synthetic N use | How is the sustainability being assessed? If one were to incorporate all of the costs and benefits associated with the use of synthetic N vs legumes the answer may not be straight forward as it will be highly dependent upon associated land management practises, type of legumes and region. In other words, it is very context dependent and again reliant on the wider policy mix and implementation. | 67 | 4.10% |
Sustainability | Regulating synthetic N use | Sustainability improvement is certain. | 4 | 0.20% |
Fertilizer | Regulating synthetic N use | The legumes might replace or reduce the application of fertilizers. | 10 | 0.60% |
Integrated/diversified farming | Regulating synthetic N use | I think that this policy change is going to have a positive impact on organic farming in European agriculture.... Increase of organic farmers and certified bio products. | 27 | 1.60% |
Integrated/diversified farming | Trade policy | The impact on sustainability is likely to increase slightly but other measures are needed at the same time to switch to more integrated and diverse systems. | 26 | 1.90% |
Sustainability | Trade policy | As with sustainability my concerns from the previous question would be the same. If one were to view the production of legumes across the whole of Europe would the sustainability from cradle to grave actually be better than those produced elsewhere. | 44 | 3.30% |
- Category: Policy
Code | Case | Text | Words | % Words |
Subsidies | Eliminate CAP | Environmental standards would still be in effect, but farmers are not compensated. | 12 | 1.30% |
Bans | Eliminate CAP | I think that this is about as likely as banning meat or pigs learning to fly. | 16 | 1.70% |
Policy reforms | Eliminate CAP | This is not to say that we should not think about making changes to subsides. | 15 | 1.60% |
Policy reforms | Eliminate CAP | This may need means tested somehow. On a country/region and/or farmer by farmer basis. | 16 | 1.70% |
Policy reforms | Eliminate CAP | They do have to be entirely refocused around sustainability concerns. | 10 | 1.00% |
Policy reforms | Eliminate CAP | Give us such ideas about the general possibilities for the agri-food sector (and also about the EU structural organization for what matters. | 23 | 2.40% |
Policy reforms | Eliminate CAP | The massive cost of Covd19 will have a major impact on EU economies over the next 10 years. Political pressure will be to reduce public expenditure and farm subsidies will be questioned. There will not be the funds available to support agriculture as in the past. The impact on EU legume production and farm sustainability may not be great but the impact on farming will be enormous. | 67 | 7.00% |
Subsidies | Eliminate CAP | It would be of danger for the small farmers, because the big ones have enough resources for the beginning and enough political influence to get any public money. | 28 | 2.90% |
Inertia | Climate measures | If this happens, then the impact will be positive. The problem is: how likely is that anything so radical will happen? It seems to me times are not ripe yet (which sounds crazy and forces us to question: then what will have the necessary effect?). | 45 | 4.70% |
Regulatory policies | Climate measures | Regulatory measurements have the highest impact on both. | 8 | 0.80% |
Regulatory policies | Agricultural extension services | Are crucial for turning regulatory conditions into profitability. | 8 | 0.90% |
Policy reforms | Agricultural extension services | The new CAP is considering backing agricultural extension services. | 8 | 0.90% |
System lock-ins | Agricultural extension services | To advise on growing legumes. Many consultants don’t know much about legumes. So, it has to start from the scratch. | 21 | 2.40% |
Policy reforms | Agricultural extension services | Major obstacle. So if serious efforts to reboot this service were done. | 12 | 1.40% |
Policy reforms | Agricultural extension services | To rethink them–so, in my reply I imagined that if this policy will also touch upon this, then I definitely see a positive outcome. | 25 | 2.80% |
System lock-ins | Agricultural extension services | Training and thus also not part of the advisory work in most places one of the main stumbling blocks. | 19 | 2.20% |
Policy reforms | Agricultural extension services | Which is why policy tools that direct the operation of the ‘market’ is important. | 14 | 1.60% |
Regulatory policies | Regulating synthetic N use | Future regulations will play a role in inclusion of legume in crop rotations. | 13 | 0.80% |
Policy reforms | Regulating synthetic N use | Policies aimed at restricting synthetic N use will surely enhance legume area and production. | 14 | 0.90% |
Regulatory policies | Regulating synthetic N use | Stricter environmental and climate regulations related to synthetic N use will inevitably lead to favourable changes in cropping patterns and practices. | 21 | 1.30% |
Policy reforms | Regulating synthetic N use | Awareness/acceptance of the role that legumes play in the system of fixing N. As a standalone lever this is unlikely to affect significant change if there are not concurrent levers affecting awareness raising, R&D and implementation guidance, etc. | 40 | 2.40% |
System lock-ins | Regulating synthetic N use | The temptation is to believe that farmers would embrace grain legumes wholeheartedly, but they need also to be able to make a profit form their sale and to be reasonably confident in the performance of legumes as a crop. Frequently this is not the case. The inability to combat pests and diseases is a major reason why many organic growers do not produce grain legumes. | 65 | 3.90% |
Policy reforms | R&D | Is it profitable for the farmer? that’s the question. and is the aim to produce for the meat farms or looking to change consumer diets to more plant based. as it won’t work on standalone basis. long term it could be positive for sustainability. and improved ground conditions. but farmers will need cash crops to continue farming. protein crops for animal feed are price driven. globally. with many European countries not offering the most competitive advantages for a farmer in the global playfield. ask the question where in Europe can you start a commercial farm today and make a living as a farmer from scratch. today this is impossible investment is too high to carry. so, in addition to promote these changes. EU and EU countries will need to review the position of the farmer. a jungle of regulations will not help. | 142 | 12.70% |
Regulatory policies | R&D | Knew the position of the farmer. a jungle of regulations will not help. | 13 | 1.20% |
System lock-ins | Role of institutions in policy change | More and more open to change as they face to technological lock-ins and ask for new markets. | 18 | 1.10% |
Policy reforms | Role of institutions in policy change | Policy direction needs to be clear if the desired result is to be achieved. | 14 | 0.80% |
Policy reforms | Role of institutions in policy change | Design better policies and inform policy makers. | 8 | 0.50% |
Policy reforms | Role of institutions in policy change | Propose initiatives and set a general direction. | 7 | 0.40% |
Regulatory policies | Role of institutions in policy change | Making policy decisions/regulations that promote legume production and use, giving dietary guidelines. | 13 | 0.80% |
Regulatory policies | Role of institutions in policy change | Investments, regulations and public support. | 5 | 0.30% |
Policy reforms | Role of institutions in policy change | Imposition and implementation of policy levers with funding. | 8 | 0.50% |
Regulatory policies | Role of institutions in policy change | Environmental legislation. | 2 | 0.10% |
Regulatory policies | Role of institutions in policy change | Responsible for the laws and regulations and their implementation. | 9 | 0.50% |
Regulatory policies | Role of institutions in policy change | Regulations, clear policy and education/campaigns. | 6 | 0.40% |
Supportive | Role of institutions in policy change | To support consumer to be able to make more-sustainable food consumption choices–for themselves and the environment. Consumers cannot remain passive recipients of commercial (only) market forces. | 28 | 1.70% |
Regulatory policies | Trade policy | More strict and really able to limit the import of soy produced by destroying rain forests in Amazon, there could have a positive impact in legume production in Europe and on sustainability as well. | 34 | 2.50% |
Regulatory policies | Trade policy | Other rules and regulations (e.g., DG SAN) Also in the meat consumption, the farm-to-fork principle is increasing. More people will be sensible for the kind of animal production. | 31 | 2.30% |
- Category: Technology
Code | Case | Text | Number of Words | % Words |
Processing | Climate measures | There needs to be a mechanism whereby small and craft-scale capacities are available and affordable for those small scales. This is a manufacturing capacity issues, and the realisation of industrial engineering solutions targeted specifically for the small/craft scale user. | 41 | 4.30% |
Processing | Climate measures | I think legumes are a good protein, energy, fibre, and mineral source. But we still lack in good products out of legumes. But where we already have fantastic products, like some kinds of soy tofu products we will easily change the consumption pattern. | 43 | 4.50% |
Agricultural extension services | Agricultural extension services | Effective agricultural extension services will likely help farmers change towards more legume production, | 12 | 1.40% |
Knowledge | Agricultural extension services | Many farmers lack adequate knowledge about legume production since they haven’t done so within living memory. | 17 | 1.90% |
Knowledge | Agricultural extension services | Many farmers simply have no clue about legume production as their fathers did not grow them anymore and they were not taught about them. | 24 | 2.70% |
Knowledge | Agricultural extension services | There is little development work to show how they can improve legume crop yields on farm, so they have little interest in supporting the crop. | 25 | 2.80% |
Innovation | Agricultural extension services | Increased development work and expansion of legume crops would increase the interest of farm advisors and lead to major improvement in crop productivity, | 23 | 2.60% |
Knowledge | Agricultural extension services | A better educated value chain and more enthusiasm from advisors for the benefits and use of legumes, can only improve the situation. I can only comment from my own regional experience, and we do not have a shortage of agronomists and advisors, but their general level engagement with legumes is low, | 51 | 5.80% |
Knowledge | Agricultural extension services | Farmers get more information, advice, and knowledge. This could lead to an increased production of legumes. | 16 | 1.80% |
Knowledge | Regulating synthetic N use | As regards to sustainability this would substantially improve from legume expansion if current technical issues on legume cropping would be solved. | 21 | 1.30% |
Knowledge | Regulating synthetic N use | It is critical that legumes are managed optimally to ensure that their potential benefits are capitalised upon. It would be unfair to push farmers towards increasing legume cropping without first ensuring that the farmers have access to legume-agronomy training and support (including the use of cover-crops). | 48 | 2.90% |
Breeding | Regulating synthetic N use | Also, that enough crop seeds are available for the growers to sow, and that these are for varieties which industry would like. (Note also: the cover crop seed-industry in Europe is not subject to the same QA guarantees as cash crops such as legumes, cereals etc.–in many parts of Europe getting the best out of legumes demands establishing a good cover crop afterwards–though of course they can be used as green manure in their own right). | 79 | 4.80% |
Innovation | Regulating synthetic N use | Especially if “legumes” are extended to include clovers and alfalfa which can be biorefined to extract food and feed proteins, | 20 | 1.20% |
Knowledge | Regulating synthetic N use | Grain legumes export a lot of N in the grain, forage legumes leave more N. For instance, when water availability is low such as in areas with <400 mm, vetch as forage legume or an increase in fallow can occur, | 40 | 2.40% |
Agricultural extension services | Regulating synthetic N use | This will require a lot of support from agricultural research and extension–services which have been seriously neglected in recent decades. | 22 | 1.30% |
Innovation | Regulating synthetic N use | There will be technical improvement on synthetic N to reduce the N2O gas emission, | 14 | 0.90% |
Research | Regulating synthetic N use | This will require considerable R&D work into how legumes can be best used in various rotations, on different soil types, in different climates, etc. Otherwise the effect will be a general reduction in arable crop productivity and sustainability. | 40 | 2.40% |
Knowledge | Nutrition, diet, and health | To a great extent this knowledge is already available but doesn’t get beyond expert circles. | 16 | 1.70% |
Processing | Nutrition, diet, and health | I think we need to have some convenience foods made of legumes available if we truly wish to increase the consumption, | 21 | 2.20% |
Knowledge | Nutrition, diet, and health | To what extent is the capacity of food literacy (i.e., home economics and how to cook (legumes)) still taught in schools. Food and food technology education needs reinvigorated across Europe. | 31 | 3.30% |
Knowledge | Nutrition, diet, and health | Better informed consumption choices, and the related nutrition, diet and health policies, will always have a significant positive impact. | 19 | 2.00% |
Knowledge | Nutrition, diet, and health | Support consumption together with a deeper education (that is: not just information available but a whole support-program, such as directions for cooking, taste lab, taste experiences, etc.), not sure how much it will affect production. | 36 | 3.80% |
Research | Nutrition, diet, and health | However, the need is to undertake research to establish the functionality of pulses for use by the food industry as a food ingredient. | 23 | 2.40% |
Processing | Nutrition, diet, and health | It is feasible to replace large amounts of wheat and maize with pulse flours as more healthy food ingredients if the food processors know how they can utilise them. | 29 | 3.00% |
Processing | Nutrition, diet, and health | Alternative foods must be promoted. Primarily however they must be tasty and attractively priced, i.e desirable. This largely means improvements in processed foods with legumes as increasing proportion of the ingredients and a price that moves peoples’ attention away from animal protein sources. | 43 | 4.50% |
Processing | R&D | Improved processing for feed and food the demand may also be growing, | 12 | 1.10% |
Breeding | R&D | It is also important that the new types are also bred to optimise system functions, | 14 | 1.30% |
Breeding | R&D | New cultivars resistant to diseases (Conventional and genetic editing) and new cropping systems can facilitate introduction of (grain) legumes in rotations because farmers will have an easier task, | 28 | 2.50% |
Breeding | R&D | Are focused on new breeds, | 5 | 0.40% |
Processing | R&D | Novel options for the storage and processing of legumes will have some positive impact, | 14 | 1.30% |
Knowledge | R&D | However, require more than increased knowledge, | 6 | 0.50% |
Innovation | R&D | Development of new products by the aggrotech industry not currently justified, | 12 | 1.10% |
Research | R&D | Legume research will only be playing catch up in this respect and will need very considerably more input to make rapid progress, | 22 | 2.00% |
Breeding | R&D | Progression of varieties is the natural territory of the breeder BUT they are limited in their interests (as is the rest of the value chain) by the size of the market. Production of more is possible using the varieties that already exist. Regional production of species that are not already produced is one potential area that could benefit e.g., chickpeas and lentil in NW Europe, though in reality there is probably material in existence that can already be made to work in many situations IF growers see an opportunity to profit and are prepared to experiment, learn and accept some variability in performance year on year. | 108 | 9.70% |
Breeding | R&D | New breeds are urgently needed for climate adaptation. | 8 | 0.70% |
Innovation | Role of institutions in policy change | Innovations in plant-based substitutes. | 5 | 0.30% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | It could be fact-based instead of opinion-biased. | 8 | 0.50% |
Breeding | Role of institutions in policy change | Breeding. | 1 | 0.10% |
Processing | Role of institutions in policy change | Processing legumes. | 2 | 0.10% |
Breeding | Role of institutions in policy change | Breeding of legumes with higher production and higher resistance towards pests and diseases. | 13 | 0.80% |
Innovation | Role of institutions in policy change | Entrepreneurs to develop novel food types. Food entrepreneurs to develop novel recipes containing legumes. | 14 | 0.80% |
Processing | Role of institutions in policy change | To explore or expand use of legumes in flour. | 9 | 0.50% |
Innovation | Role of institutions in policy change | Innovative products. | 2 | 0.10% |
Innovation | Role of institutions in policy change | Stainable and future-oriented technologies, innovations, goods and services. | 9 | 0.50% |
Innovation | Role of institutions in policy change | Palatability of leguminous products through the use of innovative food processing technologies | 12 | 0.70% |
Processing | Role of institutions in policy change | Food industry new product development to seek ways of improving food nutritional value by using pulses and pulse products as food ingredients. | 22 | 1.30% |
Innovation | Role of institutions in policy change | Put policy into practice.. | 5 | 0.30% |
Research | Role of institutions in policy change | Research, extension innovations to support farmer capacity. | 7 | 0.40% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | Inform about options or scenarios, their conditions, and effects on and beyond agriculture based on best scientific evaluation. | 18 | 1.10% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | Unbiased KNOWLEDGE to the policy. | 5 | 0.30% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | Knowledge regarding legumes as part of crop rotation. | 8 | 0.50% |
Research | Role of institutions in policy change | Research into agro-food technologies. | 5 | 0.30% |
Breeding | Role of institutions in policy change | Legume breeding and the improvement of cropping systems. | 9 | 0.50% |
Agricultural extension services | Role of institutions in policy change | Providing with technical advice and incentives to the producers. | 9 | 0.50% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | Generating knowledge and teaching. | 4 | 0.20% |
Research | Role of institutions in policy change | R&D funds to support improved legume crop productivity and use as food ingredients. | 13 | 0.80% |
Research | Role of institutions in policy change | Breeding or subsidised breeding and production research is essential as legumes start at a comparative disadvantage after years of under investment by industry. These investments are not necessarily endless but essentially filling a gap where in this case the market has failed. | 43 | 2.60% |
Breeding | Role of institutions in policy change | Breeding or subsidised breeding and production research is essential as legumes start at a comparative disadvantage after years of under investment by industry. These investments are not necessarily endless but essentially filling a gap where in this case the market has failed. | 43 | 2.60% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | To support consumer to be able to make more-sustainable food consumption choices–for themselves and the environment. Consumers cannot remain passive recipients of commercial (only) market forces. | 28 | 1.70% |
Knowledge | Role of institutions in policy change | Farmer knowledge exchange, cooperative business models. | 6 | 0.40% |
Innovation | Trade policy | Innovative products and processing methods. | 5 | 0.40% |
- Category: Farming
Code | Case | Text | Words | % Words |
Smallholder/small scale | Climate measures | Animals are an important part of mixed farming systems and fulfil an important traditional and cultural part for many smallholders. | 20 | 2.10% |
Nutrition | Climate measures | It is also not realistic either, so I am not in favour of this. We need to consider the whole food system and also population health, how to best fit animal production to plant production and also take into account non-food side-streams that be utilised in animal husbandry to produce high-value protein for humans. | 57 | 6.00% |
Nutrition | Climate measures | Decreasing the consumption of red meat from the current level may do us good but whole nations to move to vegan diets may expose to some serious health risks, particularly in vulnerable groups such as growing children and aged people. | 40 | 4.20% |
Production | Climate measures | Be careful with the huge increase of biomass production and the requirement to find and to develop new end uses (non-food?). 80% of the land is used to feed animals today, so the livestock reduction will offer the opportunity to grow something else: the question is what. | 48 | 5.00% |
Production | Agricultural extension services | Transforming EU agriculture; therefore, they would result in improving legume production and agriculture sustainability. | 14 | 1.60% |
Production | Agricultural extension services | Focuses on the production part, not the consumption. | 8 | 0.90% |
Meat/dairy | Agricultural extension services | Meat producers. | 4 | 0.50% |
Good agricultural practices | Agricultural extension services | Farmers thanks to good practices and high-quality products. | 9 | 1.00% |
Rotations | Agricultural extension services | rotations and the production of legumes. | 8 | 0.90% |
Crops/arable area | Agricultural extension services | As a crop area of just 3–4% is inevitably going to attract a similar proportion of the interest. | 19 | 2.20% |
Smallholder/small scale | Agricultural extension services | If all farmers would have a profit from that or if again the small family farms become forgotten. | 18 | 2.10% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | One might see a change in crop rotations. | 8 | 0.50% |
Production | Regulating synthetic N use | Clearly a policy restricting the use of synthetic N fertilisers would be favourable for legumes production. | 16 | 1.00% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | Would need quite a lot of work to optimise crop rotation etc.. | 13 | 0.80% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | The limitation on N use can affect rotation sequences and legumes can be included more frequently in new rotations. What legume is introduced is another question. | 26 | 1.60% |
Production | Regulating synthetic N use | I think effect on production is different than effect on consumption. If there were to be measures to restrict the application of synthetic N fertilizer, legume production would certainly increase. | 30 | 1.80% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | As regards the implications for the sustainability of EU agriculture, clearly the potential expansion of legumes needs to be part of a new crop rotation regime in which beans & pulses co-exist with grains, roots, and tubers. | 37 | 2.20% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | Any restriction in use of N will certainly lead to a modification of the cropping systems. Rotations will be adapted to include N-fixing crops. | 25 | 1.50% |
Production | Regulating synthetic N use | Restrictions on synthetic N use will have a negative impact on crop productivity. | 13 | 0.80% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | To counter this the need will be to create a different balance in the rotations which are likely to lead to the use of more legume crops. | 27 | 1.60% |
Production | Regulating synthetic N use | Increased availability will increase consumption in the animal feed sector, perhaps at the expense of imported soya, BUT this sector may also decline if the costs of production rise and meat consumption is to be discouraged with higher prices and negative environmental messages. Consistency of availability of product is an often-declared reason for the current low level of use, therefore more availability would potentially drive consumption. | 67 | 4.10% |
Rotations | Regulating synthetic N use | Shortage of synthetic N will stimulate the use of legumes in rotation and reduce the opportunities for high protein feed. | 20 | 1.20% |
Nutrition | Nutrition, diet, and health | I could imagine that people eat more legumes if they know more about nutrition but if that will significantly change production patterns, I do not know. | 26 | 2.70% |
Pest resistance | R&D | If the R&D makes legume yield less dependent on the vagaries of weather and pests, I think farmers would be happy to include legumes in their crop rotations. | 29 | 2.60% |
Rotations | R&D | The only one of these measures to affect legume production is the crop rotation schemes. | 15 | 1.30% |
Production | R&D | Technical shortcomings of legume production, this would substantially improve their production and sustainability in EU agriculture. | 16 | 1.40% |
Pest resistance | R&D | New cultivars resistant to diseases (Conventional and genetic editing) and new cropping systems can facilitate introduction of (grain) legumes in rotations because farmers will have an easier task. | 28 | 2.50% |
Rotations | R&D | Effective crop rotation schemes, new strategies to better recycle N. | 10 | 0.90% |
Pest resistance | Trade policy | They have too many problems with diseases, weeds, and pests. | 10 | 0.70% |
Meat/dairy | Trade policy | Production of which I think have to be substantially reduced in line with EAT-Lancet proposals to cut meat consumption by half. Cheap soy meal from Brazil & elsewhere in S. America has to be eliminated in the interests of ecological restoration. | 41 | 3.00% |
Appendix C. Components of the Seven Policy Scenarios
Keywords | Climate Measures | N Fertilizer | Elimination of CAP | Extension Services | Nutrition, Diet, and Health | R&D | Trade Policy |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
% of Words | |||||||
Breeding | 4.8 | 14.4 | |||||
Climate change | 5.5 | ||||||
Consumption | 6.5 | ||||||
Competition | 15 | ||||||
Complexity | 4 | 4 | |||||
Costs | 11 | ||||||
Externalities | 5 | ||||||
Fertilizers | 4.5 | ||||||
Health | 6 | ||||||
Inertia | 4.1 | ||||||
Incentives | 6 | ||||||
Investment | 4.8 | 4.1 | |||||
Knowledge | 6.5 | 15 | 10.5 | ||||
Nutrition | 11 | ||||||
Pest resistance | 4.5 | ||||||
Policy reforms | 13.8 | 6.5 | 12.6 | 4.5 | |||
Preferences | 11 | ||||||
Production | 4.3 | 7.5 | |||||
Processing | 8.5 | 9.8 | |||||
Rotations | 9.5 | ||||||
Subsidies | 4 | ||||||
System lock-ins | 4.3 | ||||||
Sustainability | 22 | 4.4 | 14.5 | 4.2 | |||
Trade | 5.5 | ||||||
Tradition | 8.2 |
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Statement Number and Code | Statement Description |
---|---|
1 (T) | Changing international trade agreements would reduce the EU’s dependency on non-taxable soybean imports. |
2 (CI) | Agricultural incentives within the CAP support cultivation of legumes. |
3 (CG) | Green direct payments of the CAP foster the transition to sustainable food and feed systems. |
4 (PS) | Policies supporting legume production and consumption increase industrialized livestock production as well. |
5 (IRD) | Investments in agri-food and -feed research and knowledge transfer increase the competitiveness of protein crops and legume-supported food products. |
6 (NFU) | Preventing the use of inorganic N fertilizers creates room for more legume production. |
7 (CCP) | Climate change policies may influence the reduction of meat production and consumption; they also increase legume cropping and decrease the use of inorganic fertilizer. |
8 (DH) | Nutrition, diet, and health policies and public campaigns that promote the inclusion of legumes in the human diet make legumes more visible and increase imports for consumption. |
9 (PFP) | Public food procurement strategies that focus on sustainability offer healthier options in foodservice markets that trigger shifts towards legume-supported diets. |
10 (TD) | Providing transparency of market data boosts legume value chains. |
Measure | “What If?” Scenarios |
---|---|
Climate measures | There will be public consensus to launch radical climate mitigation measures (e.g., requiring a significant decrease in the carbon footprint caused by food production), and collective political decisions are made in this direction. |
Eliminate the CAP | A radical policy shift happens, and the EU stops all agricultural subsidies through the CAP. |
Agricultural extension services | Farm advisory and agricultural extension services become fully capable (both in terms of knowledge and human and financial resources) of supporting farmers and other actors along the value chain to implement new research outcomes at the farm level. |
Regulating synthetic nitrogen fertilizer use | Stricter environmental and climate regulations are applied to crop and livestock production in Europe. The new measures combine legal restrictions on synthetic N use with a system of allowances for farmers. |
Nutrition, diet, and health policies | Diet and health policies build on, and at the same time share with consumers, the best available knowledge on the nutritional value and the health and environmental impacts of different food sources. Nutritional guidance on calorie intake is provided to consumers through various means (e.g., doctors, public food procurement rules, etc.). |
R&D investments | Public R&D investments are focused on new breeds, effective crop rotation schemes, new strategies to recycle N better, and novel options for the storage and processing of legumes. |
Trade policy | Environmental, safety, and ethical standards are increased for imported raw protein sources (used either for feed or food) to level the playing field for homegrown legumes. |
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Balázs, B.; Kelemen, E.; Centofanti, T.; Vasconcelos, M.W.; Iannetta, P.P.M. Policy Interventions Promoting Sustainable Food- and Feed-Systems: A Delphi Study of Legume Production and Consumption. Sustainability 2021, 13, 7597. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147597
Balázs B, Kelemen E, Centofanti T, Vasconcelos MW, Iannetta PPM. Policy Interventions Promoting Sustainable Food- and Feed-Systems: A Delphi Study of Legume Production and Consumption. Sustainability. 2021; 13(14):7597. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147597
Chicago/Turabian StyleBalázs, Bálint, Eszter Kelemen, Tiziana Centofanti, Marta W. Vasconcelos, and Pietro P. M. Iannetta. 2021. "Policy Interventions Promoting Sustainable Food- and Feed-Systems: A Delphi Study of Legume Production and Consumption" Sustainability 13, no. 14: 7597. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147597
APA StyleBalázs, B., Kelemen, E., Centofanti, T., Vasconcelos, M. W., & Iannetta, P. P. M. (2021). Policy Interventions Promoting Sustainable Food- and Feed-Systems: A Delphi Study of Legume Production and Consumption. Sustainability, 13(14), 7597. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147597