Water-Energy-Seafood nexus: eco-innovation and circular economy strategues in the Atlantic Area (Q4298685): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Changed an Item: Edited by the materialized bot - inferring region from the coordinates) |
(Changed an Item: Edited by the materialized bot - inferring region from the coordinates) |
||
Property / contained in NUTS | |||
Property / contained in NUTS: West Region, Ireland / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Revision as of 12:43, 17 June 2022
Project Q4298685 in France, Ireland, United Kingdom, Portugal, Spain
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Water-Energy-Seafood nexus: eco-innovation and circular economy strategues in the Atlantic Area |
Project Q4298685 in France, Ireland, United Kingdom, Portugal, Spain |
Statements
1,734,009.99 Euro
0 references
2,312,013.32 Euro
0 references
75.0 percent
0 references
1 April 2019
0 references
31 March 2022
0 references
University of Cantabria
0 references
The transition to a circular economy provides opportunities, especially for the food sector. However, in a global food economy, investments and new alliances between regions will be necessary. It is important to balance environmental influences with social and economic gain in policy and decision making for regional and global food flow. The NEPTUNUS project aims to promote the sustainable development of the seafood sector in the Atlantic Area by supplying a consistent methodology for products eco-labelling and defining eco-innovation strategies for production and consumption under a circular economy approach. Its main objective is to pursue a new transnational clustering concept approach (NEXUS) to review, examine and harness key eco-labelling and key enabling eco-innovations that add-value and cross-cut sea food-water-energy domains in order to address barriers and to strengthen these sectors regionally and across jurisdictions in the Atlantic region. This project will provide key actions for resource efficiency based on life cycle thinking, incorporating producers, policy makers and consumers in the decision making process. (English)
0 references