Regional bioeconomies in Catalonia and Finnish Lapland : [Regionala bioekonomier i Katalonien och finska Lappland]

This policy brief explores the bioeconomy strategies implemented in two different European regions, by describing some of the strategies used to promote and implement a bioeconomy agenda in Catalonia and Finnish Lapland, with a focus on the actors involved, their roles and the interactions with othe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morales, Diana
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Umeå universitet, Institutionen för geografi 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-189977
Description
Summary:This policy brief explores the bioeconomy strategies implemented in two different European regions, by describing some of the strategies used to promote and implement a bioeconomy agenda in Catalonia and Finnish Lapland, with a focus on the actors involved, their roles and the interactions with other relevant actors or stakeholders. Catalonia does not have a single bioeconomy strategy. Instead, different public organisations from the regional government have designed and implemented their own agendas, partly based on the European Union bioeconomy and circular economy strategies. The regional agency in charge of promoting innovation and competitiveness amongst firms and businesses (ACCIO), and the Forest Science and TechnologyCentre of Catalonia (CTFC), are the organisations with the greatest advancements in implementing a bioeconomy agenda. Their approach to the bioeconomy and the actors involved vary greatly, depending on the economic sector targeted. While ACCIO approaches the bioeconomy mostly as a process of industrial transformation that should use existing competitiveadvantages, CTFC sees the bioeconomy as an opportunity to boost an underdeveloped economic sector (forestry). Lapland, on the other hand, has structured its bioeconomy agenda within the smart specialisation strategy, which prioritises five clusters of selected economic areas. Two of those clusters are directly related to bioeconomy and circular economy. The first cluster, called Artic Industry and Circular Economy targets the region’s main economic sectors, aiming to promote circular solutions, efficient use of natural resources and industrial symbiosis. The second cluster, called Arctic Smart Rural Communities, is more preoccupied with rural villages and rural entrepreneurs’ well-being and steady income, incentivising local production of food and decentralised energy systems.Both regions show that accounting for regional diversity iscrucial for a successful bioeconomy strategy, as the strategies depend on a variety of institutional, social ...