The Netherlands and Castilla-La Mancha of Spain collaborate on a project for low-yield olive groves

Published 2022년 2월 10일

Tridge summary

The Netherlands is partnering with Castilla-La Mancha to improve water and soil management in low-yielding olive groves, with the project set to begin in the Campo de Montiel and Montes de Toledo regions. The collaboration, which started in April 2021, will guide farmers in deciding about the new Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) 2023-2027 and eco-regimes, with the first phase focusing on scientific research to aid decision-making. The project, which aims to combat climate change and protect essential resources, will be launched in these regions but is open to any farmers interested in participating.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Netherlands and Castilla-La Mancha are working together on a project aimed at improving the comprehensive management of water and soil in low-yielding olive groves, whose practical phase will begin in the Campo de Montiel and Montes de Toledo regions, although it is open to farmers who want to join. The Minister of Agriculture, Water and Rural Development, Francisco Martínez Arroyo, held a meeting this Wednesday with the Dutch ambassador to Spain, Jan Versteeg, to discuss this collaboration that began in April 2021 and that now it is in its first phase. With almost 1.2 million hectares of woody crops, Castilla-La Mancha is a power in this sector, specifically in the vineyard, olive grove, almond and pistachio trees, since it has 23 percent of woody crops in Spain. In fact, one out of every three agricultural hectares in the autonomous community is devoted to woody crops (14 percent of the surface of the region is woody crops) and a "very important" part nte" of this area is ...
Source: Agrodiario

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