In a decisive move to accelerate Europe’s agroecological transition, the “Biosolutions for Sustainable Agriculture” thematic Partnership was officially launched on 17 June 2025 in Brussels during the Europea Smart Specialisation Strategies (S3) conference. Coordinated by Wagralim (Belgium), this initiative unites 10 innovation clusters across 20 NUST 2 regions in seven EU countries.
Why Now? Context & strategic framework
This network stems from the European Commission's Smart Specialisation on Agri-food, a platform designed to foster interregional innovation partnerships (Thematic Smart Specialisation Partnerships, TSSPs) across Europe. Established in 2025, the Biosolutions partnership promotes biocontrol, biostimulants, and biofertilisers within the EU Green Deal, Farm to Fork strategy, and Soil Mission framework. Rooted in a One Health approach, the scheme connects plant, animal, and human health to ensure ecological resilience and economic competitiveness.
Mission et objectives
The core mission: to scale up European biosolutions and place Europe at the forefront of green biotech. The goals include:
- Accelerating market readiness of biosolutions
- Fostering public-private investment across regions
- Coordinating training, regulatory alignment, and experimentation
- Creating a centralised European Biosolutions Hub to unify innovation, policy and market entry efforts
Aligned with major S3 priorities, the partnership builds upon themes like soil health, digital agri-tech, circular bioeconomy, and green innovation.
Main activities & structure
The partnership will unfold through four strategic pillars: Innovation, Investment, Training, and Regulatory Support
Major initiatives include:
- Joint R&D and living labs led by regional networks
- Facilitating innovation, investment, training and policy recommendation
- Mobilising EU funding via Horizon Europe, Interreg, Interregional innovation investment (I3), and etc.
The initiative tackles critical obstacles:
- Fragmented regulation and inconsistent market access
- Low SME absorption and slow innovation diffusion
- Insufficient interregional coordination
By marshaling resources and stakeholders across regions—and using a quadruple-helix model (public, private, research, civil society)—the network aims to overcome these hurdles. It offers a scalable blueprint for delivering EU Green Deal targets, pesticide reduction (‑50% by 2030), and agroecological resilience.
A theme already very present at Wagralim
For Wagralim, the European S3 initiative on biosolutions for sustainable agriculture represents a natural extension of the regional AgriBioCare working group. Building on this foundation, it adopts a bottom-up approach to ensure that regional expertise, priorities, and challenges are effectively translated and integrated into the European innovation agenda. This initiative aims to foster cross-regional collaboration, promote shared solutions to common agricultural sustainability challenges, and enhance the visibility and impact of Wallonia’s agri-food ecosystem at the EU level.
More info here: https://www.wagralim.be/en/nos-projets-innovation/agribiocare/