
The AgData (Agriculture of Data) partnership aims to unlock the potential of data to enhance climate, environmental and socio-economic sustainability and productivity in the European agriculture and food sector. By leveraging Earth Observation (EO), environmental, agricultural and other data alongside advanced digital and data technologies, AgData supports both the digital and green transitions across the EU and strengthens the capacity for evidence-based policy monitoring and evaluation.
AgData promotes the integration and use of diverse data sources to boost resilience, competitiveness and innovation in agriculture. The partnership contributes to major European priorities, including the European Data Strategy, the Farm to Fork Strategy, the European Green Deal, and evolving data governance frameworks such as the Data Governance Act (DGA) and the Data Act. By addressing environmental, biodiversity and climate challenges, AgData aims to enable smarter decision-making for producers, researchers and policymakers throughout Europe.
PCSS participates in the AgData Partnership by contributing two internal projects serving as Use Cases. PCSS supports the monitoring and evaluation of Use Cases and contributes to ecosystem-building activities, including co-design, requirements gathering, and stakeholder engagement. PCSS also supports technical developments enabling interoperability between Polish and Belgian tools, strengthening cross-border collaboration and data-driven innovation.
Partners: https://agricultureofdata.eu/partnership/
The AgData Partnership brings together 72 partners from 26 countries, uniting organisations, research institutions, governmental bodies, and industry stakeholders committed to advancing sustainable and data-driven agriculture. This broad and multidisciplinary consortium combines expertise ranging from Earth observation and data science to agricultural practice, policy development, and innovation management.

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) onlyand do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or European Research Executive Agency (REA). Neitherthe European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.