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NEWS

The project TomaBioTec started in January with the aim of developing and validating innovative solutions that contribute to a more sustainable and efficient production of tomatoes in the industry, in line with the current challenges of the agri-food sector, by integrating biotechnology and digital technologies.

TomaBioTec Logo

The initiative aims to evaluate, under real field conditions, the effectiveness and efficiency of a biosolution with bioprotective and/or biostimulant properties, developed by InnovPlantProtect (InPP), This could help improve the quality and productivity of industrial tomato crops.

The rehearsals take place at Alentejo and Spanish Extremadura and combine traditional agronomic methods with advanced technologies, such as drones, multispectral sensors and artificial intelligence models. This approach allows detailed monitoring of the health of the crop, the presence of pests and diseases and the impact of the bioproduct throughout the production cycle.

The project “TomaBioTec: New biological and digital solutions for tomato crop protection and fertilization” is led by the InPP, in collaboration with the Centro Tecnológico Nacional Agroalimentario Extremadura (CTAEX) and Cordeiro Group, and was selected as one of the winners of the 7th edition of the Promove Program, The prize was awarded by the “la Caixa” Foundation, in partnership with Banco BPI and the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), in the category of innovative pilot projects.

This project reinforces the commitment to biological and digital solutions as drivers of more sustainable, competitive agriculture based on scientific evidence, with a direct impact on producers and industry.

More information about the project here.

InnovPlantProtect (InPP) was present at the XVI National Maize Congress, which also included the 2nd Meeting of Cereal Crops, organized by ANPROMIS, in collaboration with ANPOC and AOP. The event took place on February 11 and 12 at CNEMA in Santarém, bringing together national and international experts to discuss the sector's main challenges.

António Saraiva, Executive Director of InPP, took part in the panel “Cereal Production: What technical challenges are we facing?”, where he highlighted the decisive role of research in responding to the emerging challenges of cereal production, in a context of growing demographic, environmental and economic pressure.

“I'm proud that today, after seven years, we have 28 researchers working full-time on this topic, 12 of whom have PhDs, with experience in crops such as rice, which has been central to our work,” he said, emphasizing the multifunctional and international nature of InPP's teams.

He also pointed out that the work being done extends beyond rice to include maize, through ongoing projects and new operational groups focused on emerging crop problems. Among the initiatives in the spotlight is an application to Horizon Europe focused on developing improved and more resilient varieties.

For António Saraiva, anticipation is the key to success: “These challenges can't wait too long to be discussed or resolved. The sooner we anticipate the issues, the easier, more effective and more economical the solutions will be.”

In a debate that also marked the 40th anniversary of Portugal's integration into Europe and the role of the Common Agricultural Policy in the cohesion of the European Union, one message was clear across the board: “Climate change is the biggest threat we have.”

InPP thus reaffirms its commitment to innovation, science and the development of sustainable solutions for the future of cereal crops.

There are days when science begins long before you enter the laboratory or the field. It starts at dawn, when the alarm clock goes off too early. When you mentally review the day's list: an experiment that can't be missed, a trip to the field that depends on the weather, an unfinished report, a meeting scheduled at the wrong time. In between, someone to wake up, someone to drop off, someone to call. And yet science moves forward.

At InnovPlantProtect, there are now 15 women who give a face to the science and innovation developed here. Women who represent commitment, demand, resilience, overcoming, quality, talent, excellence and creativity. But they are only part of a greater whole. There are many more - and each one brings with it a story that doesn't fit into a CV, a patent application or an article.

Today, February 11th, marks the International Day of Women and Girls in Science, a UNESCO initiative that underlines the importance of the female role in the production of scientific and technological knowledge and the need to continue promoting equal access to careers in science and innovation. Portugal has encouraging figures: women represent almost 50% researchers in the country. It's a relevant figure, reflecting decades of progress. But the figures don't show what happens between them.

Because science, for many women, is made up of fragile balances.

There are women with intense family lives, others with more solitary journeys, still others who build support networks outside traditional models, with effort and creativity. There are difficult choices and decisions, unexpected circumstances, forced breaks, changes of pace, different phases of life. All legitimate. Many are invisible when you only look at the end result of a project, an article or a biosolution developed. - but they all influence the paths of science.

One day, one of our researchers - let's just call her that - told us that she had finished a field trial close to sunset. The phone rang while she was putting away her materials. It was the school. A delay. Nothing extraordinary. It was business as usual. She came home exhausted, with dirt still on her boots, opened her computer after dinner and went back to her data, because the experiment couldn't wait.
“It wasn't a heroic day,” she said. “It was just a normal day.”

And perhaps that is what is most remarkable.

In the field of crop protection, the work is demanding, technical and often unpredictable. It takes place in the laboratory and in the field, between strict protocols and decisions made under real conditions. It requires persistence, adaptability, attention to detail and an integrated view of problems. Characteristics that so many women bring with them - not by nature, but by experience, by path, by everything they have learned to manage at the same time.

Each personal story profoundly shapes the way we do science. The doubts, the challenges, the forced breaks, the changes of pace, the new beginnings. None of this is left at the laboratory door. It all silently enters into the way we observe, question and build knowledge.

To celebrate the International Day of Women and Girls in Science is to recognise this reality as a whole. It is to honour the women who continue to do science despite the challenges — and often because of them. And it is to remember that innovation is also born from lives fully lived, shaped by imperfection, effort and courage.

Today we celebrate them. Not just for what they produce, but for all that they are. In science, in the field, in the laboratory - and in the life that happens in between.

EVENTS

The new InnovPlantProtect (InPP) space, which involved an investment of 2.8 million euros, was officially inaugurated this Thursday, July 28, at 2:30 p.m. in the building of the National Institute for Agricultural and Veterinary Research (INIAV) - Elvas Pole, in Elvas, in the presence of 120 guests.

The inauguration session was attended by the Minister for Science, Technology and Higher Education, Elvira Fortunato, the Minister for Territorial Cohesion, Ana Abrunhosa, the Secretary of State for Regional Development, Isabel Ferreira, the Secretary of State for Agriculture and Rural Development, Rui Martinho, and the Councillor for Elvas Municipal Council (C.M. Elvas), Hermenegildo Rodrigues, who was representing the Mayor of Elvas.

Ana Abrunhosa began by congratulating and thanking the entire InPP team for their work and emphasized that “in order to carry out quality research, anywhere and not just in the geographies considered to be the most usual, it is necessary to provide highly qualified human resources in the areas to be researched, adequate facilities, cutting-edge equipment and state-of-the-art technology” and, according to the minister, “the InPP has all these conditions”.

The Minister for Territorial Cohesion stressed the role of “fair working conditions and salaries” as additional factors that contribute to InPP being a project of “excellence”, which “has everything it needs to fulfill its scientific aspirations” and also warned of the “importance that European funds have had and must continue to have for projects like this: a regional development project based on a marriage that we want to be a happy one between knowledge, research, companies and the community”. 

Elvira Fortunato highlighted the importance of the InPP and its mission to “work actively to find practical, innovative and sustainable solutions in such an important and vital area as agriculture and the preservation of the environment and natural resources” in the current national and global context and added that the InPP “is a meeting of minds of various national and international players, to do more and better science, to offer society more technology and innovation and to transform knowledge into practical solutions that improve people's lives.”

“We need all the players, all the researchers and all the institutions like the ones that have come together today around this collaborative laboratory,” stressed the Minister of Science, Technology and Higher Education and concluded her speech with a message of strength for the entire InPP team: “May this be a house where your work is consolidated and strengthened for many years to come. Your success will be everyone's success”.

Isabel Ferreira highlighted the importance of the InPP's areas of activity, especially in the “context of the pandemic and the war that we are experiencing, which has increasingly shown the importance of the agri-food sector as a response to emergency and crisis situations. And, therefore, this approach that the InPP takes of focusing its intervention on a phase even before production itself, and assuming this fundamental role of bringing scientific knowledge of excellence that exists in these themes, and especially in this theme of the fight against pests and diseases that affect the largest and most important agricultural crops.”

The Secretary of State for Regional Development wished the CoLABs a “successful journey” and stressed the importance of funding, namely “competitive funding, the provision of services, so that the CoLABs are increasingly self-sustainable”.

Rui Martinho highlighted the work that has been carried out by the InPP team, particularly in the control and eradication of Xylella fastidiosa and in mitigating the effect of bacterial fire, which “constitute very significant threats to our productive activity”.

“We are dealing with an organization [the InPP] that plays a central role in the development of agriculture, in the economic and environmental performance of our farms and, due to its composition, will ensure the necessary transfer of knowledge to the sector and to companies and entities involved in the production process,” said the Secretary of State for Agriculture and Rural Development.

Finally, Hermenegildo Rodrigues began his speech by expressing the municipality's “pride in being part of this project, as a privileged partner, recognizing the added value it brings to this region, which is essentially agricultural, and at the same time allowing us, through scientific knowledge, to make ourselves known to the world”.

The Councillor of the Municipality of Elvas also pointed out, with “enormous satisfaction and pride”, the first provisional patent application submitted on July 21st by the InPP team, He called it “a step in the enormous mission of this laboratory, which I'm sure will be just the first of many”.

After the inauguration session, CoLAB was presented by Margarida Oliveira, chairman of the InPP Board of Directors, and Pedro Fevereiro, executive director.

Pedro Fevereiro began by thanking all the guests present and congratulating the associates for the “path they have traveled”, considering them to be “the soul of the institution”, without whom, according to the CEO, “it would not be possible to build what we have built”. The executive director also thanked the funding and promoting bodies, the entire team, as well as InPP's clients “for the trust they have shown”, and the institutions that have agreed to partner and collaborate with CoLAB.

According to Pedro Fevereiro, InPP “has to develop innovation, protect it and deliver it to those capable of putting it on the market”. One of InPP's strategic objectives is to create industrial property by developing new products that can be patented and then handed over to companies and placed on the market, thus generating value.

During his speech, the executive director also referred to the initial funding of around seven million euros, of which 2.8 million were used to modernize the infrastructure and equipment, which “give the opportunity to develop innovative products”, and highlighted the 110,000 euros that resulted from InPP's activity in 2021, a figure that will be “far exceeded” in 2022.

Pedro Fevereiro ended his speech looking to the future. According to the CEO, the future of the institution will involve maintaining the team, ensuring InPP's financial sustainability, attracting public and private funding for CoLAB and creating services that meet the needs of clients and solve their problems.

The event ended with a tour of the new facilities.

On January 18, 2021, InPP began work on its permanent premises in the building of INIAV Elvas, a founding member of InPP, and is now fully operational, having completed all the refurbishment of the building and installed all the equipment. The inauguration thus marks a new stage for InPP, in which it intends to continue developing new products (new biopesticides and new resistant plants) and services for farmers, as well as at a social and regional level, insofar as it positions itself as a hub for attracting investment to the Alentejo region and also boosts the creation of qualified jobs and the densification of the country's interior.

This is a fundamental milestone in the history of InPP, its associates, members of the governing bodies and partners, and an essential tool for the future of the institution, being central to the affirmation of the mission to develop innovative, biological and digital solutions to promote safer, more sustainable and productive agricultural production methods, adjustable to the variations introduced by climate change in the Alentejo region.

Researchers at InnovPlantProtect (InPP) have just submitted, on July 21, 2022, the first provisional patent application for the industrial protection of a bacterial strain, isolated from nature and ecologically safe, which is highly effective in controlling fire blight.

Bacterial fire is a disease caused by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora, This is a major cause of the disease, which affects several plant species, particularly those in the rosaceae family, namely pear and apple trees, and has had a huge negative impact on rock pear and apple orchards in Portugal, as there are no efficient solutions for controlling it.

“This is the first of several innovative biological products under development at InnovPlantProtect. We are certain that this and other biological agents under development in this CoLab will have a decisive impact on the protection of Mediterranean crops and the achievement of the objectives of the European Green Deal,” says Pedro Fevereiro, Executive Director of InPP.

Example of a pear plant with fire blight, caused by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora

InPP has seen the approval of two mobilizing agendas of the Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRR) “Mobilizing Agendas for Business Innovation - Proposals for the Economy of the Future” in which it participates: InsectERA and the Blue Bioeconomy Pact. 

The InsectERA agenda, which involves a total investment of €57 million, aims to apply circular economy concepts to the insect industry. The idea is to return by-products from the agro-industry, and some agricultural and urban waste, to the value chain, in the form of nutritional solutions for people, animals and plants, as well as new industrial solutions, from cosmetics to bioplastics. The consortium is led by INGREDIENT ODYSSEY, S.A.

The Blue Bioeconomy Pact agenda, led by Inovamar and corresponding to a total investment of €220 million, aims to reindustrialize the blue bioeconomy by creating new economic models based on the use of marine bio-resources, also creating the first blue bioeconomy in the world. hub european blue bioeconomy.

The information is public and can be consulted on the IAPMEI - Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation, I. P.