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Collecting and sharing data on bee health: Towards a European Bee Partnership

Logos of the stakeholders organising the "Towards a European Bee Partnership" symposium

Registration for this event is now closed.

EFSA is organising, together with COPA-COGECA, the European Professional Beekeepers Association (EPBA), Bee Life (European Beekeeping Coordination) and the European Crop Protection Association (ECPA), a scientific symposium on bee health as part of the European Parliament’s Week of Bees and Pollination 2017.

The objective of the event is to bring together stakeholders involved in bee health – including beekeepers, farmers, industry, scientists, risk assessors and managers, citizens, and policy makers – to discuss ways of improving data sharing/management, standardising data collection/reporting/storing, and strengthening collaboration to enable a more holistic and robust risk assessment of bee health in Europe.

The meeting is envisaged as the first step towards the creation of a European Bee Partnership, a standing network that will put the conclusions of the symposium into practice.

26 June 2017, Bibliothèque Solvay, Brussels

TimeItems

08.15-09:00

Registration of participants

SESSION 1 | PLENARY SESSION

09:00

Welcome & introduction to Bee Week event
M. Gabriel, MEP, European Parliament

09:20

Introduction to EFSA
H. Deluyker, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
Presentation

09:30

Bee Health – European Commission Inter-service Working Group activities
L. Kuster, DG SANTE, European Commission
Presentation

09:40

Overview of past scientific colloquiums of Bee Week event
K. N’Guyen, University of Liege, BE
Presentation

09:50

Video presentation on EFSA’s MUST-B project

10:00

Objective of the colloquium
S. More, University College Dublin, IE
Presentation

10:10

Overview of Discussion Group 1

  • HEALTHY-B toolbox and application of Health Status Index
    P. Hendrikx, ANSES, FR
    Presentation
  • Beekeepers' involvement and needs
    W. Haefeker, European Professional Beekeepers Association (EPBA), BE
    Presentation
  • Bee scientists' involvement and needs
    M. Brown, Animal & Plant Health Agency, UK
    Presentation
  • Bee health data within the crop protection industry
    A. Alix, European Crop Protection Association (ECPA), BE
    Presentation
  • Bee health monitoring and pollination
    S. van der Steen, Wageningen University, NL
    Presentation

11:10

Coffee/tea break

11:40

Overview of Discussion Group 2

  • Honey bee colony model (ApisRAM) for risk assessment
    C. Topping, Aarhus University, DK
    Presentation
  • Colony monitoring at landscape level
    M. Wang, WSC Scientific GmbH, DE
  • Knowledge Junction & information sharing
    J. Richardson, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
    Presentation
  • Bee Health Workbench
    A.J. Thomas, Oxford Internet Institute, UK
    Presentation

12:40

Lunch break and networking

SESSION 2 | PANEL DISCUSSIONS

13:40

Panel discussion on Discussion Group 1 | Stakeholder collaboration to establish holistic bee health monitoring in the field

Chairpeople:

  • P. Hendrikx, ANSES, FR
  • E. Bruneau, COPA-COGECA, BE

Rapporteurs:

  • F. Verdonck, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
  • S. Vos, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)

 

Panel discussion on Discussion Group 2 | Better data collection and access for better bee health risk assessment

Chairpeople

  • C. Topping, Aarhus University, DK
  • N. Simon Delso, Bee Life, BE

Rapporteurs

  • A. Rortais, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
  • C. Szentes, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)

15:10

Coffee/tea break

SESSION 3 | PLENARY SESSION

15:40

Report back from Discussion Group 1 + Q&A
F. Verdonck, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
Presentation

15:50

Report back from Discussion Group 2 + Q&A
A. Rortais, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
Presentation

16:00

Discussion Group 3 | European Bee Partnership

Chairpeople

  • T. Robinson, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
  •  K. N’Guyen, University of Liege, BE

Rapporteurs

  • S. Pagani, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
  • A. Afonso, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)

EFSA Stakeholder Engagement Approach
G. Kumric, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
Presentation

What is the vision of the European Bee Partnership? (16:10)
T.Robinson, European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
Presentation

Panel discussion (16:15)

  • W. Haefeker, European Professional Beekeepers Association (EPBA), BE
  • P. Neumann, COLOSS (Prevention of honey bee COlony LOSSes), CH
  • M. Dermine, Save the Bees Campaign Coordinator, Pesticide Action, Network Europe (Pan-Europe), BE
  • A. Alix, European Crop Protection Association (ECPA), BE

17:40

EU funded research on bees and pollinators (FP7 and H2020)
JC Cavitte, DG AGRI, European Commission
Presentation

17:50

Concluding remarks
S. More, University College Dublin, IE
Presentation

 
18:00Honey beer tasting

The European Parliament’s Working Group on Apiculture and Bee Health, chaired by MEP Mariya Gabriel, tasked this year’s scientific conference to come up with a tangible, practical proposal to help bring together information and data from disparate sources with one aim – to halt the decline in bee loss or weakening of honey bee colonies. Our proposal is to work towards setting up a European Bee Partnership to answer that request.

Members of the beekeeping industry, scientists and national and EU bodies across Europe have worked hard over the years to highlight the worrying decline in the number of healthy honey bees and honey bee colonies. Huge amounts of work across Member States have been produced, and data published, showing the multi-faceted issues facing the health of bees, in particular honey bees.

EFSA’s HEALTHY-B opinion provides a framework which can be consulted by stakeholders involved in measuring, analysing and reporting honey bee health in the EU. This framework will contribute to the progress of a wider EFSA mandate, the MUST-B project, on assessing honey bee health taking into account multiple stressors.

Information availability and accessibility are among the big challenges of our time. The complexity of honey bee health risk assessment requires all available information be made accessible and that all efforts are made in a collaborative manner to turn data into real knowledge. In order to keep focus, this scientific meeting will be dedicated to honey bees. The hope is that this initiative can be extended in the future to include other types of bees (e.g. bumblebees and solitary bees).

EFSA’s access to multi-disciplinary expertise, together with its commitment to independence and excellence of science, can be a great advantage in helping steer such a project with multiple stakeholders.

Following a commitment by bee health and other stakeholder groups at this scientific meeting to work towards establishing a European Bee Partnership, EFSA will be ready to facilitate meetings of a discussion group in the year following the event. This discussion group will draft Terms of Reference for the Partnership and its objectives to present to the EU Bee Week High Level Conference in 2018.

Overview of the event

The objective of the colloquium is to engage all relevant stakeholders involved in bee health, including beekeepers, farmers, industry, scientists, risk assessors and managers, citizens, and policy makers to identify the different needs to improve data sharing/management, to further standardise data collection/reporting/storing, and to strengthen collaboration for a more holistic and more robust assessment of bee health in EU.

The event is organised into two plenary (morning and afternoon) and two breakout sessions.

The first plenary in the morning introduces the topic of this scientific colloquium on “Collecting and sharing data on bee health: Towards a European Bee Partnership” from the perspectives of the different representatives involved in bee health at EU level and also provides an overview of colloquia organised during Bee Week activities in previous years.

In the afternoon, the technical aspects of strengthening data sharing and improving data collection quality and efforts in EU will be discussed in two breakout sessions and further discussed in a second plenary when the European Bee Partnership will be presented and discussed.

The first discussion group “Stakeholder collaboration to establish holistic bee health monitoring in the field” is specifically on the identification of stakeholders needs to optimise data sharing in the EU; the second discussion group “Better data collection and access for better bee health risk assessment” focuses on the more technical aspects of data collection/reporting and storing with high quality standard requirements and ultimately on issues related to data management.

The afternoon plenary “European Bee Partnership”, with input from the two breakout discussion groups, provides the opportunity to the relevant stakeholders to develop concrete actions towards increased collaboration.

Feel free to contact us for any content-related matters or organisational and logistical issues at the following address: conferences [at] efsa.europa.eu.