Strategic Challenges for Sustainable Governance of the Bioeconomy: Preventing Conflict between SDGs
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Relevance, Research Hypothesis and Methodology
2. Literature Review
3. Results
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- the biotechnology vision, emphasizing the importance of biotechnology research, application and commercialization in different sectors of the economy;
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- the bioresource vision, focusing on the processing and upgrading of biological raw materials, as well as on the establishment of new, related value chains;
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- and the bioecology vision, highlighting sustainability and focusing attention on ecological processes that allow for the improved use of energy and nutrients and promote biodiversity, including agricultural practices that avoid monocultures and soil degradation [34].
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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The Concept of Bioeconomy Implemented at the Political Level | Region (Country) and Year of Implementation | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OECD Countries | Germany | Japan, Thailand | EU | United States, Norway, Malaysia | South Africa, Belgium | Finland, Greenland | Italy, Spain, France | Ireland | Canada | |
Year of implementation | 2009 | 2010 | 2010 | 2012 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2016 | 2018 | 2019 |
Country or Association, Year | Bioeconomy |
---|---|
European Commission, 2012 [29] | Bioeconomy is the production of renewable biological resources and the transformation of these resources and waste into value added products such as food, feed, biological products, as well as bioenergy. The bioeconomy is the production of biomass and the conversion of biomass into value added products, such as food, feed, bio-based products and bioenergy. It includes such sectors as agriculture, forestry, fisheries, food, pulp and paper production, as well as parts of chemical, biotechnological and energy industries. |
European Commission, 2018 [30] | The bioeconomy covers all sectors and systems that rely on biological resources (animals, plants, micro-organisms and derived biomass, including organic waste), their functions and principles. It includes and interlinks: land and marine ecosystems and the services they provide; all primary production sectors that use and produce biological resources (agriculture, forestry, fisheries and aquaculture); and all economic and industrial sectors that use biological resources and processes to produce food, feed, bio-based products, energy and services. |
OECD, 2009 [31] | Bioeconomy is the set of economic activities in which biotechnology contributes centrally to primary production and industry, especially where the advanced life sciences are applied to the conversion of biomass into materials, chemicals and fuels. |
White House, 2012 [32] | A bioeconomy is one based on the use of research and innovation in the biological sciences to create economic activity and public benefit. The U.S. bioeconomy is all around us: new drugs and diagnostics for improved human health, higher yielding food crops, emerging biofuels to reduce dependency on oil, and biobased chemical intermediates, to name just a few. |
Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture, 2013 [33] | “Biobased economy” takes natural materials cycles as its point of orientation; it bases itself upon a structural transition from an economy based on finite resources of fossil origin—mainly petroleum—to an economy more strongly based on renewable resources. The bioeconomy spans a bridge linking technology, the economy and ecological issues, by applying biological processes and resources, further developing them and thus enhancing their performance capability, as well as making their use more efficient and sustainable. The bioeconomy not only replaces raw materials sourced from fossils; it also develops wholly new products and processes. |
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Maksymiv, Y.; Yakubiv, V.; Pylypiv, N.; Hryhoruk, I.; Piatnychuk, I.; Popadynets, N. Strategic Challenges for Sustainable Governance of the Bioeconomy: Preventing Conflict between SDGs. Sustainability 2021, 13, 8308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158308
Maksymiv Y, Yakubiv V, Pylypiv N, Hryhoruk I, Piatnychuk I, Popadynets N. Strategic Challenges for Sustainable Governance of the Bioeconomy: Preventing Conflict between SDGs. Sustainability. 2021; 13(15):8308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158308
Chicago/Turabian StyleMaksymiv, Yuliia, Valentyna Yakubiv, Nadia Pylypiv, Iryna Hryhoruk, Iryna Piatnychuk, and Nazariy Popadynets. 2021. "Strategic Challenges for Sustainable Governance of the Bioeconomy: Preventing Conflict between SDGs" Sustainability 13, no. 15: 8308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158308
APA StyleMaksymiv, Y., Yakubiv, V., Pylypiv, N., Hryhoruk, I., Piatnychuk, I., & Popadynets, N. (2021). Strategic Challenges for Sustainable Governance of the Bioeconomy: Preventing Conflict between SDGs. Sustainability, 13(15), 8308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158308