Prototype climate services were co-produced, tested, and validated with major industrial players of the global food system, using MED-GOLD linked methods for user engagement and cloud-based processing/visualization of data (i.e. the ICT platform). This enabled unprecedented replicability and scalability across regions, sectors, and users, as tested in Colombia for coffee—the world’s top agricultural commodity.
Online surveys and participatory workshops in five languages assessed the usability and upscaling potential of the services with a wider community of users not involved in the development of the services.
An ICT platform was developed as a scalable, modular, cloud computing system enabling services such as: running heritage crop system models; showing custom visualization dashboards; connecting existing decision support tools and simulation models to cutting-edge climate data sources (e.g.
https://cds.climate.copernicus.eu/)(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre); processing seasonal climate forecast data with on-the-fly bias correction. The platform was released as open source code (see
https://github.com/medgold-ict-platform(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)).
Colombian coffee provided a case study for testing the replicability of MED-GOLD climate services, showing high potential benefits in terms of informing regional crop management and policymaking.
Analysis of the EU market for climate services and development of a business plan provided a solid ground for the commercialization of the prototype services, by describing the value creation and service delivery processes.
The project built better informed and connected end-user and policymaking communities for the global olive oil, wine, and pasta food systems by presenting at 50+ international events; organizing 12 including 8 participatory workshops, organizing 2 online training events, 4 webinars, and publishing info sheets, user guides, infographics, videos, a policy brief, and a glossary—all in six languages (English, Greek, Spanish, Portuguese, French, and Italian). This added to multimedia and multi-language communication implemented throughout the project and 25 published scientific papers, plus a project’s special issue to appear in the journal Climate Services.
The COVID-19 emergency impacted the project significantly. Substantial effort was devoted to converting the planned face-to-face activities into online engagement. A major result was the MED-GOLD final showcase event with 300+ registered contacts from across the world and speakers from industry, NGOs, international institutions, and the policymaking community. Industry users from the MED-GOLD consortium shared success stories, and the event ultimately enabled participants to share and exchange ideas regarding the potential to apply and use the MED-GOLD pilot services in their own cross-sectoral decision-making contexts.
Key dissemination material produced by the project is available through the MED-GOLD Horizon 2020 Project community on Zenodo (
https://zenodo.org/communities/med-gold/(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)).