O InnovPlantProtect (InPP) promotes the seminar “Six years of innovation: The path of CoLABs for the future of the agricultural and agri-food sectors”, on the next day June 11th, from 09h30 until 11h00, in center stage at Espaço InsectERA, located in the Central Cloisters of the National Center for Agricultural Exhibitions and Markets (CNEMA) in Santarém.
The seminar aims to present the practical results and real impact of six Collaborative Laboratories (CoLABs) in Portugal - InnovPlantProtect, Colab4Food, FeedInov, Food4Sustainability, MORE and SmartFarmCoLAB. These interface infrastructures are essential pillars of the National Innovation System (SNI) and play a growing and essential role in the dynamics of innovation for agriculture and agri-food.
The event will be attended by members of the teams and partners of each of the CoLABs, who will talk about their vision of the added value of these interface and innovation entities, from the point of view of those who collaborate directly with them.
The initiative, which is part of the National Agriculture Fair (FNA) 2025, which this year has the theme “Biosolutions” and will be the stage for exploring the innovations that are shaping the future of the sector, brings together different representatives of the innovation ecosystem to show the role of CoLABs in stimulating the transfer of knowledge and making innovation available to agriculture and agri-food in Portugal, creating value and attracting highly qualified human resources to the country.
See the full program in the image below.
The registration for the event is free, but mandatory due to the limited capacity of the space. Guarantee your presence by filling in the available form here.
We look forward to welcoming you for a morning of sharing and debate on the future of innovation in the agricultural and agri-food sectors!
Estamos em contagem decrescente para a Feira Nacional de Agricultura (FNA), uma das maiores feiras agrícolas do país!
É já de 7 a 15 de junho que o InPP vai estar na 61ª edição da Feira Nacional de Agricultura, que se realiza no CNEMA – Centro Nacional de Exposições, em Santarém.
O tema da edição deste ano é “Biosoluções”e pretende destacar a importância das soluções e tecnologias inovadoras no setor agroalimentar e na promoção de práticas mais sustentáveis e eficientes.
A FNA reúne agricultores, empresários e especialistas dos setores agroalimentar, pecuário e agrícola e é um excelente espaço para aumentar a nossa rede de contactos, trocar conhecimentos e apresentar as mais recentes tendências e soluções agrícolas que a nossa equipa tem desenvolvido.
Vai poder encontrar-nos no stand nº.18, à entrada do Espaço dos claustros, dedicado à Agenda InsectERA, entre as 10h e as 20h.
InnovPlantProtect (InPP) took part in the National Olive Growing Fair (FNO 25) in Campo Maior, from May 23 to 25, presenting its latest biological and digital innovations for crop protection, including projects focused on biopesticides for olive diseases and early detection of fungi that cause gafa, and monitoring insect vectors of the bacterium Xylella fastidiosa, which attacks olive groves. The Elvas CoLAB was present with its own stand to demonstrate its strengths and the impact of its research on agricultural sustainability, inviting producers, technicians and researchers to learn about its innovative bio-based and digital solutions and to actively participate in the discussion of the sector's challenges.
The collaborative laboratory (CoLAB) welcomed visitors at the stand no. 14, located at thematic area at the Campo Maior Municipal Garden, to showcase their activity, the ongoing projects that are developing solutions to the main olive diseases, the patents already submitted, the apps for agricultural management and the bio-based and digital products and services they have to offer the agricultural sector and the market. Throughout the three days of the fair, some of InPP's researchers were at the stand to demonstrate to visitors the various features of the Elvas CoLAB, which has been developing innovation that it hopes will contribute to the sustainability of agricultural systems.
InPP announced ValorCannBio project, which is processing biomass that is not used in the medical cannabis industry to develop effective and sustainable biopesticides against gafa and tuberculosis, The project will be carried out in the municipality of Elvas, which is responsible for decimating entire harvests, leading to severe economic losses and compromising food quality. The impact of this project will be felt in the municipality of Elvas, where the project is being developed, but it is expected that it will extend to the entire olive-growing region from Trás-os-Montes to the Algarve, where production losses are increasing due to these diseases. O AlViGen project was also one of the protagonists and is using cutting-edge technology to detecting and identifying the strains of fungi that cause gafa, long before the symptoms become visible. The project team has used traps to collect spores that circulate in the air to monitor the presence of fungi, which can give farmers an important advantage in preventing infections and protecting their crops, reducing production losses.
O SNM_XylellaVt project, The SNM_XylellaVt project, led by DRAPCENTRO and in which InPP actively participates, was also highlighted at FNO. SNM_XylellaVt is monitor the insect vectors of the bacteria Xyllela fastidiosa, in particular the foam leafhopper, the insect responsible for transmitting the bacterium, which attacks various agricultural and forestry crops, and in particular olive groves. The project team is developing new tools, such as risk prediction models which, in the presence of the bacterium, whether in plants or insect vectors, will allow the National Agricultural Warning Service (SNAA) to alert, in real time, about the economic attack levels (EAL) for these insects, thus allowing prevent infection of the main crops. As part of this project, the team has also developed an online platform where citizens can report the sighting of foams, which are signs of the presence of the insect vectors of X. fastidiosa, This will help to map its temporal and spatial distribution and to plan measures to combat this bacterium.
The FNO, organized jointly by the Campo Maior City Council and the Centre for the Study and Promotion of Olive Oil in the Alentejo (CEPAAL), is an event that aims to enhance national olive growing, and in particular Portuguese olive oil, boosting the local economy and bringing together professionals from the sector - producers, technicians, or researchers - from all over the country to discuss challenges and trends in the Portuguese olive and olive oil sector.
“InnovPlantProtect (InPP) uses state-of-the-art biological and digital knowledge to work together with producers, plant protection and seed companies, research institutions and local authorities to solve the problems posed to Mediterranean agriculture by climate change, the reduced availability of active ingredients for crop protection and the emergence of new pests and diseases for which there are no prevention and combat solutions,” says Pedro Fevereiro, InPP's executive director, in a press conference. Voz do Campo magazine.
InPP is featured in the February edition of Voz do Campo magazine and its online edition, with an opinion article entitled “InnovPlantProtect: 5 years of a Collaborative Laboratory for the protection of Mediterranean crops”, which includes an “x-ray” of the 5 years of existence of the collaborative laboratory (CoLAB) carried out by InPP's executive director.
And as far as the future is concerned, Pedro Fevereiro has some clues: “We will continue to invest in the development of innovation for crop protection using biological compounds or living organisms from different sources and types, with a view to the circular economy and sustainability, adding value to products through their industrial protection and subsequent sale.”.
This Wednesday, February 7, we had the pleasure of welcoming a delegation of members of the Angolan Embassy to the InnovPlantProtect (InPP) facilities, accompanied by the Mayor of Elvas, José Rondão Almeida.
During the visit, the ambassador of the Republic of Angola, Maria de Jesus Ferreira, as well as 1st secretary Analberto Guilherme and 3rd secretary Maria da Conceição Pimenta, had the opportunity to get to know the collaborative laboratory (CoLAB), the laboratories and find out a little more about the work and the different areas of activity being explored by the five departments of CoLAB.
This was a great opportunity to identify and discuss future opportunities for new partnerships, collaborations and projects.
I would like to thank the delegation from the Angolan embassy for their visit.
InnovPlantProtect (InPP) celebrated its fifth anniversary this Wednesday, January 24th, at 2pm, in the building of the National Institute for Agricultural and Veterinary Research (INIAV) - Elvas Pole, in Elvas, with the presence of 120 guests. The commemorative event, which brought together InPP members, different representatives of the innovation ecosystem, representatives of other collaborative laboratories (CoLAB) in the agri-food sector, producer associations, farmers and policy makers, aimed to take stock of the 5 years of CoLAB activity and explore prospects for the future.
The afternoon began with the opening session, which was attended by Margarida Oliveira, chairman of the InPP Board of Directors, who warned of the need for more sustainable crop protection solutions than the current ones, reducing the negative impacts on food safety and agrosystems, adding that the new export markets have tighter certification processes, in which there is greater control, and therefore the new solutions should focus on crops that can be grown in the region, i.e. Mediterranean crops.
InPP, an initiative of the New University of Lisbon (UNL) led by the Green-it research center of the Institute of Chemical and Biological Technology (in Oeiras), in cooperation with other UNL scientific units, “is one of the 41 approved CoLABs that make up the existing CoLAB network in Portugal, and one of the 7 that is based in regions of low population density and the only one whose area of activity is the protection of agricultural crops,” said the Chairman of the Board of Directors.
The 14 members that currently make up CoLAB were also highlighted. In 2023, the Polytechnic Institute of Portalegre and Lusosem joined the 12 members that make up InPP, such as the Municipality of Elvas, universities, R&D centers, agricultural companies and producers“ associations. ”However, we intend to increase this number and include all the educational and research institutions in the Alentejo and also increase the number of associated agricultural companies," said Margarida Oliveira.
CoLAB's first five years were about “setting up the conditions, getting the project off the ground, starting to show results (...) and demonstrating credibility in the field. This is extremely important in order to move on to the next phase because you can't win competitive projects with a team that isn't recognized as having quality,” he explained.
According to the chairwoman of the Board of Directors, for the next phase “we need to find someone to promote the products that are coming out of the InPP team's work and someone to obtain contracts that will ensure InPP's viability when public funds reduce” due to the institution's coming of age.
Currently, InPP develops innovative bio-inspired and digital solutions to protect crops, develops services according to users' needs, promotes more sustainable agriculture, adaptable to climate change and in solidarity with the environment, and takes on board the European Union's environmental, climate and digital transition directives.
Margarida Oliveira ended her speech by pointing out that “maintaining a CoLAB like the InPP is something critical for the country and something we not only need, but have a duty to invest in”.
The Secretary of State for Regional Development, Isabel Ferreira, began her speech by recalling the network of collaborative laboratories, initially designed by Manuel Reitor, Portugal's former Minister of Science, Technology and Higher Education, who prioritized inland regions as places to set up CoLABs.
“Collaborative laboratories are still very young, but today we can be proud to have a network of CoLABs spread throughout the country (...) and also in different themes (...) that result from what is most important for the territory where they are located. In the case of InPP (...) it is undoubtedly today an essential driving force for the development of the Alentejo region (...) which is the interface between the Academy and the socio-economic/productive fabric, the companies,” said the Secretary of State.
Isabel Ferreira congratulated the work carried out by the entire team that makes up the InPP, “especially on issues that are so relevant to what is the country's strategy for 2030 (...), aligned with the European context and which is of enormous importance for the European Union's environmental, climate and digital transition directives”.
The InPP's “obvious” contribution to mitigating the impact of climate change on crops was also highlighted by the Secretary of State, “who knows that today [crops] face such important challenges that require increasingly focused research and an increasingly rapid response, and only by working in a network, in partnership, can this be achieved.”
When asked about the ease of attracting highly qualified human resources to the interior territories, particularly to Elvas, the Secretary of State's answer left no room for doubt: “They will never have any difficulties because the project is attractive, the job they are offering is a highly qualified, motivating job and, therefore, people come and stay. And this is a very powerful weapon for territorial cohesion and the development of the interior.”.
Isabel Ferreira ended her speech by saying that it has been a “real privilege” to witness the growth of CoLAB, which has gone through a process with different stages, from signing, recovering facilities and obtaining state-of-the-art equipment and technologies, and which has culminated in the evolution of these structures with “competence and quality”.
At 3:15 p.m., the session “What innovation is produced at InPP?” took place, in which the five department directors Cristina Azevedo, Sandra Correia, David Learmonth (three photos above, from left to right), Ricardo Ramiro and iLaria Marengo (two photos below, from left to right), presented their teams and the work they have been able to develop, as well as the new technologies, products and services that have been produced in the various areas of CoLAB's activity.
“We want to create value through the management of living organisms in the farmer's field. This is the purpose of the InPP”. These were the words chosen by InPP's executive director, Pedro Fevereiro, to kick off the closing session, which took place from 4pm.
The executive director considers the InnovPlantProtect brand to already be a recognized reference throughout the country, particularly in the agricultural sector, and emphasized the four patents already produced by CoLAB to protect crops against various diseases that affect them at regional and national level and the more than 2 million euros raised in 8 innovation and development projects that are currently active, one of which is the first CoLAB project funded by the international Horizon Europe program.
One of CoLAB's latest innovations - the InPP app store, which is in the final stages of development and will soon be available to farmers - was also highlighted. The app aims to give users access to six applications that the team has been developing.
What about the future? Pedro Fevereiro believes that if the “good pace” of innovation production and patent creation continues, and if the ability to attract contracts with companies and producers who want to see their problems solved and who turn to InPP increases, CoLAB will be able to complete the 1/3 of funding from its own revenues that is required of CoLABs.
For InPP, the executive director aims to increase interaction with the regional network through projects and partnerships, participate in the training of young people at various levels of schooling, extend the international network, ensure budgetary sustainability and guarantee jobs.
Pedro Fevereiro thanked the Minister for Territorial Cohesion for all the support and funding that her Ministry has made available to CoLAB whenever difficulties have arisen, the Municipality of Elvas, NOVA University, INIAV, the National Innovation Agency (ANI), InPP's associates and the human resources that make up the InPP team.
“InPP is about people. (...) Everything else is just talk. If we don't have these people with us, we don't have patents, we don't have InPP, we don't have anything. We owe this to them,” he concluded.
The second speaker at the closing session was Hermenegildo Rodrigues, a councillor from Elvas Municipal Council (CM), who was present on behalf of José Rondão Almeida, president of Elvas Municipal Council, and who began by highlighting the work carried out by the InPP over the last five years and identifying the “added value it brings to the municipality, the region and the world of science, and, at the same time, its proactivity with the farming and school community, both through contracts and partnerships, protocols that have raised awareness, changed habits and added knowledge”.
The Elvas city councilor continued his speech with the topic of CoLAB's internationalization, saying that “it is to the credit of all the professionals who work here, for the way they have integrated, dignified and interacted with Elvish society, and for the work they have done, and for fostering collaboration between the various players”.
The municipality's support for InPP was reinforced in the words of Hermenegildo Rodrigues: “It's up to us, the local authorities, to keep the door open, your door. We will, as always, be available to walk side by side in the search for solutions that make strategies and objectives viable. (...) From us to you, thank you very much,” he concluded.
The closing session continued with Gonçalo Rodrigues, Secretary of State for Agriculture, representing the Minister for Agriculture and Food, Maria do Céu Antunes, who highlighted the role of the country's inland regions for agricultural activity.
“This CoLAB is about bringing the countryside, which is often “ostracized and forgotten” (in the words of Hérman José, quoted by the Secretary of State), but which is actually at the heart of it all. This is where agriculture is. The urban environment, unfortunately, continues to create a gap with the rural world. But we also have to bring in this experience, bring in academia, bring in scientists, to feel the land, to feel the countryside, and then somehow produce what are the necessary tools for the development of this basic economic activity, (...) without which we wouldn't have quality, safe food on our shelves,” recalled the Secretary of State for Agriculture.
In his speech, Gonçalo Rodrigues stressed the importance of the InPP in making the agricultural sector more sustainable, innovative and competitive: “This is a demonstration of what a collaborative laboratory should be. (...) I would venture to say that few or perhaps very few have had or have the success that we find here at the InPP. It must also serve as a flagship for what is done well in our country and try to transfer this capacity to others, materializing it in our sector. This is what our agriculture needs,” he concluded.
The session ended with a speech by the Minister for Territorial Cohesion, Ana Abrunhosa, who thanked the municipality and the Alentejo Regional Coordination and Development Commission (CCDR Alentejo) for their support for the InPP, which, according to the minister, she hopes will continue to be given to this project.
For Ana Abrunhosa, “[the InPP] has helped us a lot to get across the idea that quality research can and should be done anywhere, as long as the essential conditions are met”.
“It's a benchmark project, which carries out scientific research at the highest level, attracts talent (...) from different geographical origins, some of whom have had the opportunity to return to our country after their world experience, through this project. What's very important about these projects is that they guarantee fair pay, with excellent working qualities. And if we add to all this that this project is located in this beautiful city in the countryside, (...) the quality of life is exceptional,” he said.
The Minister for Territorial Cohesion continued her speech by reiterating the government's support for CoLABs, because according to her “there is no better use for European funds than projects like this”. Government support for the CoLAB network began in 2020, with the Portugal 2020 program, and will continue until 2030, with the current Portugal 2030 program.
“We spend our lives trying to invent the wheel. This is an example [of a project, the InPP] that we can give and that we would very much like to multiply throughout the rest of our country and, above all, it's important that those who have responsibility do so,” he concluded.
From 4.45 p.m. guests gathered for a drink and to sing happy birthday to InPP with birthday cake.
The balance of the commemorative event was positive, having been able to attract the Elven community, representatives of various companies and agricultural producers, and the academic community.
After five years, InPP promotes the transfer of knowledge, reinforces its position as a CoLAB capable of fostering the development of new technologies, products and services with a strong technological and innovation component, and strengthens its commitment to promoting solutions that make a difference in tackling the various challenges of agricultural crop protection.