SMARTCHAIN - Towards Innovation-Driven and Smart Solutions in Short Food Supply Chains

Francisco Javier Casado Hebrard ,
Francisco Javier Casado Hebrard

University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany

Susanne Braun ,
Susanne Braun

University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany

Dimitrios Argyropoulos
Dimitrios Argyropoulos
Contact Dimitrios Argyropoulos

University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

Published: 28.07.2022.

Volume 11, Issue 3 (2022)

pp. 129-137;

https://doi.org/10.7455/ijfs/11.si.2022.a1

Abstract

In recent times, Short Food Supply Chains (SFSCs), i.e., supply chains in which the number of intermediaries between farmer and consumer are minimal or ideally nil, and local markets have flourished in Europe, both in rural and urban areas. SMARTCHAIN is a 3-year Horizon 2020 multi-actor project of 43 partners from 11 European countries, including key stakeholders from the short food supply chain domain – a kaleidoscope of ‘actors’ where science meets a wide range of non-technical disciplines and stakeholders across the agri-food value chain. Its central objective is to develop a portfolio of technological, organisational, social, and digital innovations, which will be validated in a Living Lab approach (18 pan-European use cases on short food supply chains) ensuring powerful co-creation and testing. SMARTCHAIN will develop 9 national Innovation Hubs and the SMARTCHAIN Innovation Platform, a digital portal for building a stakeholder community, and facilitating engagement, communication, and knowledge exchange across stakeholders. This special issue focuses on the most recent developments with respect to innovation in short food supply chains and publishes original research articles in this field.

Keywords

References

1.
Bakalis S, Valdramidis V, Argyropoulos D, Ahrne L, Chen J, Cullen P, et al. Perspectives from CO+RE: How COVID-19 changed our food systems and food security paradigms. Current Research in Food Science. 2020. p. 166–72.
2.
Benedek Z, Ferto I, Szente V. The Multiplier Effects of Food Relocalization: A Systematic Review. Sustainability. 2020. p. 3524.
3.
Cappelli A, Cini E. Will the COVID-19 pandemic make us reconsider the relevance of short food supply chains and local productions? Trends in Food Science and Technology. 2020. p. 566–7.
4.
Chiffoleau Y, Dourian T. Sustainable Food Supply Chains: Is Shortening the Answer? A Literature Review for a Research and Innovation Agenda. Sustainability. 2020. p. 9831.
5.
Collison M, Collison T, Myroniuk I, Boyko N, Pellegrini G. Transformation Trends in Food Logistics for Short Food Supply Chains -What is New? Studies in Agricultural Economics. 2019.
6.
De Souza R. Box-scheme as alternative food network-the economic integration between consumers and producers. Agricultural and Food Economics. 2020. p. 18.
7.
Majewski E, Komerska A, Kwiatkowski J, Malak-Rawlikowska A, Wcas A, Sulewski P, et al. Are Short Food Supply Chains More Environmentally Sustainable than Long Chains? A Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of the Eco-Efficiency of Food Chains in Selected EU Countries. Energies. 2020. p. 4853.
8.
Malak-Rawlikowska A, Majewski E, Wcas A, Borgen S, Csillag P, Donati M, et al. Measuring the Economic, Environmental, and Social Sustainability of Short Food Supply Chains. Sustainability. 2019. p. 4004.
9.
Moruzzo R, Riccioli F, Galasso A, Troccoli C, Espinosa Diaz S, Di Iacovo F. Italian Social Farming: the Network of Coldiretti and Campagna Amica. Sustainability. 2020. p. 5036.
10.
Pato M. Short food supply chains -a growing movement. The case study of the Viseu Dão Lafões Region. Open Agriculture. 2020. p. 806–16.
11.
Vitterso G, Torjusen H, Laitala K, Tocco B, Biasini B, Csillag P, et al. Short Food Supply Chains and Their Contributions to Sustainability: Participants’ Views and Perceptions from 12 European Cases. Sustainability. 2019. p. 4800.

Citation

Copyright

Article metrics

Google scholar: See link

The statements, opinions and data contained in the journal are solely those of the individual authors and contributors and not of the publisher and the editor(s). We stay neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Most read articles

Indexed by