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Identification of Marine Biotechnology Value Chains with High Potential in the Northern Mediterranean Region
Authors
Marina Aboal
Francisco Gabriel Acién Fernández
+30 more
Cristóbal Aguilera
Jesús E. Argente García
Charlène Auregan
Cristian Chiavetta
Roberta De Carolis
Chrysa Efstratiou
María Ángeles Esteban Abad
Antonia Giannakourou
Ernesta Grigalionyte-Bembi
Juan Luis Gómez Pinchetti
Yannis Kotzamanis
Mate Kova
Maja Ljubic Cmelar
Gian Marco Luna
Sonia Manzo
Iva Milasincic
Antun Nadarmija
Luisa Parrella
Massimiliano Pinat
Grazia Marina Quero
Ana Rotter
Efstratios Roussos
Colin Ruel
Elisabetta Salvatori
María Semitiel García
Antonio F. Skarmeta Gómez
Francisco Javier Sánchez Vázquez
George Triantaphyllidis
Jan Ulcar
Amalia Venetsanopoulou
Publication date
22 July 2023
Publisher
Abstract
©2023. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This document is the Published, version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Marine Drugs. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/ 10.3390/md21070416Marine (blue) biotechnology is an emerging field enabling the valorization of new products and processes with massive potential for innovation and economic growth. In the Mediterranean region, this innovation potential is not exploited as well as in other European regions due to a lack of a clear identification of the different value chains and the high fragmentation of business innovation initiatives. As a result, several opportunities to create an innovative society are being missed. To address this problem, eight Northern Mediterranean countries (Croatia, France, Greece Italy, Montenegro, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain) established five national blue biotechnology hubs to identify and address the bottlenecks that prevent the development of marine biotechnology in the region. Following a three-step approach (1. Analysis: setting the scene; 2. Transfer: identifi cation of promising value chains; 3. Capitalization: community creation), we identified the three value chains that are most promising for the Northern Mediterranean region: algae production for added-value compounds, integrated multi-trophic aquaculture (IMTA) and valorization aquacul ture/fisheries/processing by-products, unavoidable/unwanted catches and discards. The potential for the development and the technical and non-technical skills that are necessary to advance in this exciting field were identified through several stakeholder events which provided valuable insight and feedback that should be addressed for marine biotechnology in the Northern Mediterranean region to reach its full potential
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DIGITUM Universidad de Murcia (España)
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Last time updated on 21/01/2024