Agrobiodiversity Products in Alternative Food System: Case of Finnish Native Cattle Breeds
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Framework for Developing Chains for Finnish Local-Breed Products
2.1. Native Breed Products as Part of Alternative Local Food Systems
2.2. Case of Finncattle in Alternative Food Network
3. Methods
3.1. Problem Identification and Structuring
3.2. From Problems To Searching For Solutions
3.3. Integration and Application
4. Results
4.1. Problem Identification and Structuring
4.2. Possible Solutions: Product Chains
4.2.1. Milk Chain
4.2.2. Meat Chain
4.2.3. Integration and Application — Bringing Results into Social and Scientific Practice
5. Discussion
5.1. Multiple Faces of Embeddedness in Developing Agrobiodiversity Food Systems
5.2. Co- Production as Means to Understand and Develop Feasible Food Chains
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Workshop | Phase of Co-Production of Knowledge | Participants |
---|---|---|
Expert workshop (national level) | Problem identification and structuring on national level based on previous R&D projects | 6 researchers and other experts |
Pirkanmaa I (regional level) | Problem identification and structuring | 26 participants: farmers, processors, advisory organization, school farm, consumers |
Pirkanmaa II (regional level) | Solution development | 14 participants: farmers, processors, and Internet retailer school farm |
Kainuu (regional level) | Problem identification and structuring and solution development | 7 participants: farming school, farmers, processor, breeding and advisory organizations |
Consumers groups from I–XI (local level) | Problem identification and structuring and solution development | 8–10 consumers in each group: ordinary consumers and consumers buying from farms, online grocery shops or via local purchase groups |
HoReCa event (national level) | Problem identification and structuring and solution development | 3 producers, approximately 100–200 representatives of HoReCa sector |
Seminar for administration and participated actors (regional level) | Integration and application | 20 participants |
Final meeting (national level) | Integration and application: | 9 participants from Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry and advisory and research organizations |
Ecological Dimensions | Social Dimensions | Local, Regional and National Dimensions | Institutional Dimensions | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Positive aspects From production to consumption | Characteristics and versatility of animals Good grazing characteristics Possibility to distinguish from industrial products New knowledge of breeds and their qualities Consumers interested in health benefits and ‘naturalness’ of products Positive image of small-scale production Consumers interest in alternative forms of production | Producers’ commitment Existing and increasing interest for collaboration and examples Direct selling as way to control market Informal channels in communication and marketing (social media, personal contacts) Pioneers in field spread knowledge New channels for marketing and delivery of products Positive image of breeds Existing consumer segment interested in products Knowledge increases willingness to pay Ethical aspects of consumption (animal welfare) Consumers interest in alternative forms of consumption | Foreign examples of regional products School and prison farms may serve as regional nodes for processing and marketing Cultural and historical values as means to increase awareness Considered as Finnish, pure and original, part of national identity Emotions and stories with regional focus as basis of marketing Consumers interest in local food Local restaurants are interested and some already use the products | Native breeds included in agri-environmental support |
Negative aspects From production to consumption | Quality of milk and meat varies Multipurposeness of breeds: quality of meat is weaker compared to pure meat breeds Half of young ones are calves with low demand Processing industry does not always appreciate quality of milk and meat Restaurants interested in only some parts of animals Consumers’ lack of awareness of breeds Research knowledge of product quality is lacking Concern for low number of animals How to differentiate from organic production | Producers’ different aims, interests and values Lack of collaboration Product design and marketing takes time and money, cost sharing unclear Lack of knowledge in processing, marketing and of consumer expectations On-farm selling is time-consuming Lack of dedicated professionals in meat processing Products considered as elitist and expensive Consumers do not easily change their consumption behaviour Quality information is not sufficient for consumers | Scattered production Breeds have lost part of their regional image Due to low volumes, logistics is based only on frozen meat | Rigidity of agri-environmental support system Lack of models for agreements among producers and between producers and processing companies Hegemony of slaughtering sector: no demand for small animals or volumes Strict new regulation regarding processing, delivery and product information |
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Soini, K.; Pouta, E.; Latvala, T.; Lilja, T. Agrobiodiversity Products in Alternative Food System: Case of Finnish Native Cattle Breeds. Sustainability 2019, 11, 3408. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11123408
Soini K, Pouta E, Latvala T, Lilja T. Agrobiodiversity Products in Alternative Food System: Case of Finnish Native Cattle Breeds. Sustainability. 2019; 11(12):3408. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11123408
Chicago/Turabian StyleSoini, Katriina, Eija Pouta, Terhi Latvala, and Taina Lilja. 2019. "Agrobiodiversity Products in Alternative Food System: Case of Finnish Native Cattle Breeds" Sustainability 11, no. 12: 3408. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11123408
APA StyleSoini, K., Pouta, E., Latvala, T., & Lilja, T. (2019). Agrobiodiversity Products in Alternative Food System: Case of Finnish Native Cattle Breeds. Sustainability, 11(12), 3408. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11123408