The available database comprises research projects in Fisheries, Aquaculture, Seafood Processing and Marine Biotechnology active in the time period 2003-2022.
BlueBio is an ERA-NET COFUND created to directly identify new and improve existing ways of bringing bio-based products and services to the market and find new ways of creating value from in the blue bioeconomy.

More information on the BlueBio project and participating funding organizations is available on the BlueBio website: www.bluebioeconomy.eu

Last Update: 2024/06/19

BioShare
Marine Biotechnology
Aquaculture
Funding Future Welfare: Bioeconomy as the «New Oil» and the Sharing of Benefits from Natural Resources
National Programme
National
Katrina Rønningen
katrina.ronningen@ruralis.no
RURALIS - Institue for Rural and Regional Research (Norway)
JHI - James Hutton Institute (United Kingdom)NMBU - Norwegian University of Life Sciences (Norway)NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology (Norway)UB - University of Buffalo (United States of America)NA - University of Otago (New Zealand)
2019
2023
€ 1,009,030
https://prosjektbanken.forskningsradet.no/en/project/FORISS/294867?Kilde=FORISS&distribution=Ar&chart=bar&calcType=funding&Sprak=no&sortBy=date&sortOrder=desc&resultCount=30&offset=0&Organisasjon.3=STIFTELSEN+RURALIS+INSTITUTT+FOR+RURAL-+OG+REGIONALFORSKNING
We will carry out an interdisciplinary analysis of the institutional system for benefit-sharing in the hydropower and petroleum sectors, which were the basis for the emergence of the extensive Norwegian public welfare. From here will draw lessons to the blue economies of aquaculture and marine bioprospecting, which are sectors expected to play important parts in the future bioeconomy. Ocean and coastal governance is demanding, and today’s regulatory arrangements do not guarantee that value creation from aquaculture and bioprospecting sufficiently benefit the public. Models for distributing benefits from marine bioresources are therefore currently up for consideration. Decisions taken today might have major consequences for citizens’ future access to publically funded welfare. BioShare will study the historical contexts in which benefit-sharing regimes became established in Norway, and compare benefit-sharing systems and principles across the petroleum, hydropower, aquaculture and bioprospecting sectors. BioShare will explore local and regional effects of benefit-sharing in the marine bioeconomy, and its relations to the social legitimacy of industrial activities. The project will assemble international scholars within studies of ocean governance to gather, develop and publish cutting edge scholarly work. Finally, BioShare will develop a set of coherent policy guidelines to inform future strategies for managing public goods for a growing range of uses and users in the Norwegian bioeconomy.
Policy; Economy; Bioprospecting; Aquaculture industry;
Not associated to marine areas
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If there is any incorrect or missing information on this project please access here or contact bluebio.database@irbim.cnr.it
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