Re-Livestock partners gathered in Valencia for a three-day General Assembly to advance climate-resilient and low-emission livestock farming
Valencia, Spain, November 2025.
The partners of the EU funded Re-Livestock project met in Valencia at the Universitat Politècnica de València for a productive three day General Assembly that provided an important opportunity to review scientific progress, strengthen collaboration across teams and reinforce the shared commitment to developing livestock systems that are more resilient, sustainable and aligned with Europe’s climate goals.
A meeting focused on scientific integration and shared learning
The assembly opened with a comprehensive overview of progress achieved across the project’s work packages. Teams presented updates on resilience assessment, emission mitigation strategies, innovation adoption and the latest developments from the ongoing case studies. These exchanges offered a clear picture of the work carried out over the past year and helped ensure that the knowledge produced across regions and species continues to move toward a coherent and integrated framework for livestock sustainability.
A central part of the meeting was a series of resilience dialogues that invited partners to reflect on how resilience can be understood and measured at different levels of livestock systems ranging from the animal to the wider territorial context. These discussions helped refine methodologies, highlight synergies between research activities and strengthen the link between environmental, social and economic dimensions of resilience.
The assembly also included an exchange with representatives from the livestock sector (C-Lock, Nestlé, Digitanimal, CRV, Provacuno and PIC). This moment provided valuable insight into the realities faced by producers and companies and reinforced the project’s commitment to scientific outputs that are both ambitious and applicable in practice.
Exploring innovation uptake and pathways for system transition
During the second day, partners worked together to deepen the understanding of how different innovations can be adopted effectively by farmers. Discussions focused on behavioural drivers, barriers to change, incentives and potential pathways for transition. This work will contribute directly to the project’s recommendations for supporting European livestock producers in adopting climate smart and resilient practices.
The programme also included interactive activities that encouraged participants to test future scenarios and explore long term strategies for sustainable livestock systems. These exercises promoted collaboration between teams and helped ensure that scientific findings align with the practical needs of the sector.
Connecting science with on farm reality
The final day of the assembly was dedicated to technical visits that allowed partners to observe applied research and innovative practices in real production settings. Participants visited the UPV Experimental Farm and the San Ramón Dairy Farm in Requena, gaining first-hand insight into how scientific approaches are being tested, adapted, and implemented on the ground.
This opportunity to connect scientific concepts with real production conditions enriched the collective understanding of both the challenges and the opportunities that shape livestock systems today.
A key moment for the project’s next phase
The Valencia assembly marked an important milestone as Re-Livestock enters its final phase of synthesis and reporting. The three days were characterised by active engagement, constructive dialogue and strong alignment among partners regarding the next steps of the project. The meeting strengthened scientific integration, consolidated important learnings and set the foundations for delivering results that can support the transition toward livestock systems that are more resilient, lower in emissions and socially responsible.










