Project hub

The Mission Soil project hub provides information on projects funded under the Mission and other relevant initiatives. Through the project hub, it will be possible to gain oversight of the emerging Mission project portfolio and follow the progress and outcomes of funded projects and initiatives more easily. The hub provides information on the goals, activities, and results, factual or expected, of the projects and initiatives, outlining the relevance to Mission objectives. 

The repository enables searches by Mission objectives (specific and operational), funding programme, time and country and allows free data downloading.

WHEATWATCHER

Safe Wheat Agriculture Towards Sustainable Health: Innovative Sensing Techniques, and Holistic Spectroscopy Traceability for Improved Soil, plant Health and safe wheat grain

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €5,967,116.25

In a world grappling with complex global challenges such as population growth, climate change, and environmental degradation, ensuring security, sustainability, and food safety is paramount. Agricultural practices and food production processes are integral to public health, economic stability, and societal well-being. However, conventional approaches have often operated in isolation, limiting our understanding and hindering scalability. The WHEATWATCHER initiative seeks to break these barriers by uniting soil health monitoring, plant health assessment, and food traceability through a cutting-edge digital soil monitoring system. This system assesses soil nutrition, chemical, and biological factors impacting wheat grains from field growth to flour production, spanning multiple European regions. 

E-SPFdigit

Emergent soil, plant and food onsite digital services on chemical and biological contaminants

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €5,033,127.50

E-SPFdigit will bring novel onsite digital tools already at TRL5 under systemic innovation, which will be further deployed, upscaled, field-tested and demonstrated to TRL7-8, in viticulture and horticulture applications in Greece and Spain in soil-contaminated areas (located near mines, offensive industries, highways, floodwaters). E-SPFdigit brings novel developed: i) MIP-based electrochemical sensors coupled with SPME for on-site monitoring and analysis of dedicated to PFAS targeted molecules, ii) Multiplex organic Surface Plasmon Resonance optical biosensors for onsite pesticides residues monitoring and analysis, iii) IDE-based electrochemical sensors for onsite detection and quantification of heavy metals & micronutrients, and iv) UVC LED -based nutrient analysers for soil water content in-situ and real time monitoring. 

PHISHES

PHysically-Based Integrated Soil HEalth Simulation Platform

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €6,090,924.96

PHISHES aims to bridge the missing link between data on soil health and actions for the safeguard of soils. This missing link entails predictive capability in terms of the consequences of actions on the provision of soil functions and associated ecosystem services, taking into account soil use, soil contamination and various drivers such as climate change. Hence the primary scientific question addressed in PHISHES is: “How do soil use and soil contamination influence soil functions and associated ecosystem services, in the presence of major drivers such as climate change, and how can we predict the impacts of mitigation and adaptation measures?”. While most research teams address this question in a qualitative / semi-quantitative fashion, using, e.g. multicriteria analysis and indicators of soil health, the ambition of PHISHES is to provide quantitative predictive capability via a PHISHES Digital Platform. 

SOILPROM

Modelling pollutant transport across the soil-water-atmosphere conituum, and impacts on ecosystem services

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €6,818,387.47

Thanks to a unique upgrade of knowledge and advanced digital tools, SOILPROM will improve the modelling of soil pollution processes for metals, PFAS, nutrients, microplastics, and pesticides through soil, air, water, and plants compartments, to reach reduced levels of pollution and healthier soils across Europe. Using both existing European databases and local newly collected standardised datasets in accordance with DestinE and EUSO requirements, project partners will upgrade, integrate and validate existing soil pollution models under field conditions in its 6 diversified use-cases. 

DeepHorizon

DEploying Ecosystemic solutions to imProve soil Health and uncOveRing subsoil functIons in the critical ZONe

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €5,860,203.75

Life on Earth thrives on the foundation of healthy soils, including topsoil and subsoil. While extensive research has focused on the topsoil layer, the subsoils remain largely unexplored. By bringing together key experts and practitioners, DeepHorizon aims to unlock knowledge of the subsoil in critical zone in order to deploy ecosystemic solutions to improve subsoil functions for soil health. DeepHorizon goal is to develop tools that will enable practitioners, land managers and policy makers to access subsoil properties, subsoil functions, soil health indicators and financial decision support tools to promote sustainable subsoil management. 

CURIOSOIL

Awakening Soil Curiosity to catalyse Soil Literacy

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €5,999,126.25

The EU-funded CURIOSOIL project will work on improving soil literacy in society. This will be pursued through multi-sensorial soil experiences, educational products, course materials and teacher training programmes. All these resources will be co-created and piloted by educators and Communities of Practice (CoPs) across 15 European countries and will be used to promote student and citizen engagement. The project will focus on four impact pathways: triggering soil curiosity, enhancing soil literacy, empowering communities and initiatives dedicated to soil education, and influencing educational policymaking.

GUARDIANS

Smart solutions to empower small- and medium-sized farms as guardians of the territory

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €4,997,500.00

Above all other considerations, creating a sustainable food system necessitates the restoration of primary production to the 'guardians' of the land, namely the proprietors of small and medium-sized farms and agricultural structures situated in rural areas. The EU-funded GUARDIANS project is designed to bolster agroecological farming models using economical and people-centred digital solutions. These solutions will undergo testing on 22 small and medium-sized farms encompassing diverse production types across six pilot initiatives led by farming cooperatives in four countries. The objective is to assist owners of such farms in bridging the technological divide that separates them from larger farms. This objective is pursued through a co-creative approach that involves farmers, agricultural stakeholders, scientists, technicians, and SMEs.

BarleyMicroBreed

Strategies for breeding climate change resilient barley, genetically equipped to optimized root-microbiome interactions

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €7,992,742.50

Barley is an inherently resilient crop. Compared to other cereals, it’s an excellent model for understanding agricultural responses to climate change. In this context, the EU-funded BarleyMicroBreed project will dig deep into the root system of barley. It will build on the paradigm that optimising the capacity of plant roots to interact with the existing soil microbiota improves crop resource use efficiency and stress resilience. The project will advance our mechanistic understanding of interactions between the crop plant genome, root phenotypic traits and the root-associated microbiota to identify innovative breeding strategies that will lead to drought-adaptive barley varieties. Part of the project’s work will be to study drought responses of 600 barley varieties in Austria, Lebanon and Morocco.

WET HORIZONS

WET HORIZONS - upgrading knowledge and solutions to fast-track wetland restoration across Europe

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €5,561,610.75

Wetlands can sequester carbon and regulate the atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases. However, wetlands are disappearing in Europe at an alarming rate, and less than 20 % remain in good ecological condition. The EU-funded WET HORIZONS project will advance crucial knowledge and develop new tools and methods for rapid large-scale wetland restoration, including a mobile app for the visualisation of wetland status and a decision support system for policy makers. The project will update and improve existing data available from pristine, drained and rewetted peatlands, floodplains and coastal wetlands. It will model the effects of ordinary restoration measures under diverse conditions and analyse the potential socio-economic impacts to deliver recommendations and best management practices.

Generation Biosourced Biologicals

Biosourced biologicals composed of Phytosterols to elicit plant response to water stress and to biotic stress as part of the transition to ecological agriculture

Funding period: -

EU contribution: €2,500,000.00

BEST-a is a pioneer product based on bio-sourced phytosterols to deliver sustainability and proven yields gain in water stress conditions. Issued from the proprietary and patented technology developed by Elicit Plant and already authorised in France for corn and soybean: this is a first product to adapt crops to climate change.