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Call Updates:
Dec 9, 2019 4:23:41 PM
Call for proposals: H2020 – Sustainable Food Security: (H2020-SFS-2019-2, second stage).
The Commission and the Research Executive Agency have now partially completed the evaluation of the proposals submitted to the above-mentioned call and informed the applicants on 09 December 2019.
An overview of the evaluation results ('flash call info') is now available in the section "Additional documents" of the "Topic conditions and documents" tab of the correspondent topic page:
· SFS-35-2019-2020 (Scope A & B): Sustainable intensification in Africa. Scope A: African Farming Systems, sustainable intensification pathways; Scope B: Soil system for Africa.
The grant agreements are expected to be signed by May 2020.
Nov 12, 2019 12:32:32 PM
“The previous version of the Work Programme (European Commission Decision C(2018)4708 of 24 July 2018) is the one applicable for the evaluation of the 2019 second stage calls.”
Oct 2, 2019 2:28:14 PM
The stage 2 of call H2020-SFS-2019-2 has closed on 4 September 2019.
54 proposals have been submitted.
The breakdown per topic is:
· SFS-35-2019-2020 (Scope A) : 16
· SFS-35-2019-2020 (Scope B) : 2
Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in December 2019
Apr 30, 2019 4:58:56 PM
The generalised feedback, resulting after the 1st stage evaluation of this topic, is published on this page. To download the document, just expand the "Topic conditions and documents" section (i.e. click on 'show more'), scroll down until "Additional documents" and the generalised feedback can be downloaded in pdf.
Apr 23, 2019 3:17:05 PM
H2020-SFS-2019-2 first stage call
The Research Executive Agency (REA) has now completed the evaluation of the proposals submitted to the H2020- SFS-2019-2 first stage call. The following overall thresholds were applied:
SFS-35-2019-2020 - Sustainable intensification in Africa. Sub-topic A - African Farming Systems, sustainable intensification pathways and Sub-topic B - Soil system for Africa 8.5
The results of the evaluation are as follows:
SFS-35-2019-2020 – RIA: 51 submitted proposals. 18 proposals are above threshold
We recently informed the applicants about the evaluation results for their proposals. The Generalised feedback will be published around beginning of May 2019 on the topic page under "Topic conditions and documents" section.
It is expected that the first grant agreements will be signed around April 2020.
Letters informing on the results of the evaluation are being sent to applicants.
Under the tab 'Topic conditions and documents' the following document is available in section 8. "Additional documents":
· SFS-2019-2 first stage flash info_en
28 January 2019
The H2020-SFS-2019-2 call was closed on the 23rd of January 2019. 251 proposals have been submitted in response to this call. The breakdown per topic is indicated below: SFS-35-2019-2020 (Sub-topic A): 46, SFS-35-2019-2020 (Sub-topic B): 6
The evaluation results are expected to be communicated to the applicants in April 2019.
16 October 2018
The submission session is now available for: SFS-35-2019-2020(RIA)
TOPIC : Sustainable Intensification in Africa
| Topic identifier: | SFS-35-2019-2020 | ||
| Publication date: | 27 October 2017 | ||
| Types of action: | RIA Research and Innovation action | ||
| DeadlineModel: Planned opening date: |
two-stage 16 October 2018 |
Deadline: 2nd stage Deadline: |
23 January 2019 17:00:00 04 September 2019 17:00:00 |
| Time Zone : (Brussels time) | |||
African and European agriculture share the common challenge of moving towards more sustainable ways of agricultural production. Both regions aim to ensure food production and reduce the environmental impact of agricultural activities in the face of climate change, more unpredictable water supply and increased degradation of (land) resources. Systems approaches are needed to optimise agricultural productivity as well as the delivery of ecosystem services.
Scope:A. [2019]: African Farming Systems, sustainable intensification pathways (RIA)
Activities shall seek to implement and test systems approaches for the sustainable intensification of primary production in Africa, taking into account its long term economic support to local communities. The proposed research should address the improvement of agricultural practices by tackling land and water management (including land degradation where appropriate) and sustainable soil management (including its quality and nutrients uptake) for sustainable intensification. The importance of traditional agricultural practices like grazing methods, livestock, crops and legumes should be duly reflected. Emphasis should be given to farming systems that support restoration of land, increase land productivity and/or bring land back into production. Proper attention should be given to the importance of gender in African agricultural production.
For proper analysis, a range of different systems should be included (e.g. organic farming, agroecology, agroforestry). While presenting results the importance of scale of the analysis and its applicability should be taken into account. The analysed systems should include socio-economic aspects, analyse its resilience to climate change, farm income and where pertinent also cultural aspects of farming. Preference will be given to proposals focusing on specific regions of Africa.
Proposals fall under the concept of the ‘multi-actor approach’[1]. Proposals should include a task to cluster with other projects financed under the topic and with the cooperation platform established under SFS-33-2017.
B.[2019]: Soil system for Africa (RIA)
For the implementation of the EU-Africa R&I Partnership on FNSSA a comparable and open database on agricultural soils information is needed. It is expected that a minimum of 20 000 sampling points will be sufficient to create a database with standard soil properties (a similar procedure to the one used for LUCAS[2] - European database - should be developed).
The soil samples will only be taken from the agricultural land and analysed by one laboratory for the: physical and chemical parameters. As a minimum the following parameters should be analysed: particle size (clay, silt and sand content), pH (acidity and alkalinity), organic carbon, carbonate content, phosphorus content, total nitrogen content and extractable potassium content. In addition an analysis of heavy metal content and other chemical residues in selected sub-samples might be proposed in order to assess the risk of soil contamination. Based on the analysed samples a set of indicators for monitoring of state of land soil, water and ecosystem should be proposed. Other physical, chemical and biological parameters for soil test might be proposed along with the specific indicators for which they will be used. The indicators should be developed as a part of the long-term implementation of FNSSA and its contribution to the SDGs discussion. Presentation of data should be provided in an open data and map viewer and should include four aspect pictures of where the soil sample was taken and should link with open earth data from e.g. the Copernicus programme and the project funded under H2020 topic SFS-43-2017[3]. It is expected that the open database will contain at least a minimum of 20 000 soil sample analysed by one laboratory. The final methodology should be developed in cooperation with and validated by the Joint Research Centre and the Global Soil Partnership – IPTS African members.
Proposals should include a task to cluster with other projects financed under the topic and with the cooperation platform established under SFS-32-2017.
The Commission considers that proposals requesting a contribution form the EU of up to EUR 7.5 million for sub-topic A and EUR 5 million for sub-topic B would allow this specific challenge to be addressed properly. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts.
Expected Impact:In the short to medium term:
In the long term: for sub-topic A - improve agricultural production potential and income of farmers and for sub-topic B- provide an open soil dataset with a set of key indicators with methodology for which soil samples and the time line of indicators can be independently repeated in support of monitoring of soil and land degradation. The set of indicators should as much as possible support the relevant SDGs implementation discussion.
Delegation Exception Footnote:It is expected that this topic will continue in 2020
Cross-cutting Priorities:Gender
International cooperation
RRI
Socio-economic science and humanities
[1]See definition of the 'multi-actor approach' in the introduction to this Work Programme part.
[2]Number of publications related to LUCAS soil component can be found under the following link: http://esdac.jrc.ec.europa.eu/resource-type/documents
[3]https://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/wp/2016_2017/main/h2020-wp1617-food_en.pdf
