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International projects source: SICRIS

Systemic Innovations Towards a Zero Food Waste Supply Chain

Organisations (4) , Researchers (3)
0552  University of Maribor
0796  University of Maribor, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  24912  PhD Aida Kamišalić Latifić  Computer science and informatics  Researcher  2022  168 
2.  53718  Martina Šestak  Computer science and informatics  Researcher  2023 - 2024  54 
1394  Kmetijsko gozdarska zbornica Slovenije Kmetijsko gozdarski zavod Murska sobota (Slovene)
3906  ITC - Inovacijsko tehnološki grozd Murska Sobota (Slovene)
Abstract
ZeroW has set the ambitious target of playing a key role in the transition of current food systems towards halving Food Loss & Waste (FLW) by 2030 and reaching near-zero FLW by 2050.ZeroW provides significant impacts through the demonstration of innovations in nine real-life food chains, by employing a systemic innovation approach, to effectively address the multidimensional issue of FLW. This involves: (i) pre-identifying systemic innovations, that incorporate multiple interlinked dimensions (process, organisational, strategy, marketing, product, technological, governance, etc.), which are tested and demonstrated; (ii) steering the evolution of innovations towards higher levels of systemic readiness and impact, using a Living Lab co-creation and multi-actor collective learning approach;(iii) enhancing the Living Lab actors’ innovation advancement capability with shared resources facilitating new ways and means of cooperating and co-developing innovations; (iv) developing context-specific trajectories for the systemic innovations (from ideation to scaling-up and commercialisation) leading to the provision of currently missing end products and services that align with consumer attitudes, food actor needs and policy trends. Moreover, ZeroW establishes a clear ‘FLW impact trajectory’, from demonstrator results (2025), scaled up to meet the F2F 2030 goals, and steered through a ‘just transition pathway’ towards a near-zero FLW in 2050.
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