A multi-stakeholder participatory study identifies the priorities for the sustainability of the small ruminants farming sector in Europe



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https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731120301336?via%3Dihub
DOI: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.animal.2020.100131
Provider: 
Licence de la ressource: 
Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY)
Type: 
Article de journal
Journal: 
Animal
Nombre: 
2
Volume: 
15
Année: 
2021
Auteur: 
Belanche, A.
Martín-Collado, D.
Rose, G.
Yáñez-Ruiz, D.R.
Editeur(s): 
Description: 

The European small ruminants (i.e. sheep and goats) farming sector (ESRS) provides economic, social and environmental benefits to society, but is also one of the most vulnerable livestock sectors in Europe. This sector has diverse livestock species, breeds, production systems and products, which makes difficult to have a clear vision of its challenges through using conventional analyses. A multi-stakeholder and multi-step approach, including 90 surveys, was used to identify and assess the main challenges for the sustainability of the ESRS to prioritize actions. These challenges and actions were identified by ESRS experts including farmers, cooperatives, breeding associations, advisers and researchers of six EU countries and Turkey. From the 30 identified challenges, the most relevant were economy-related challenges such as ‘uncertainty of meat and milk prices’, ‘volatility of commodity prices’, ‘low farm income’, ‘high subsidy dependency’ and ‘uncertainty in future changes in subsidies’ resulting in ‘a sector not attractive to young farmers’. Most of these challenges were beyond the farmer’s control and perceived as difficult to address. Thus, improved collaboration among the different stakeholders across the food chain with special implication of farmers, associations of producers, academia and governments is needed to facilitate knowledge exchange and capacity building. These actions can contribute to make ESRS economically more sustainable and to adapt the production systems and policy to the current and future societal needs in a more region-contextualized framework.

Αnnée de publication: 
2020
Μots-clés: 
dairy
goat production
meat
sheep production
sustainability