1. Establish common ethical codes-of-conduct for microbiome applications, considering whole ecosystems, keeping in mind the planetary health concept; stimulate and strengthen public research and knowledge sharing; place knowledge in the public domain; increase awareness |
2. Consider the human gut microbiome as global common heritage; seen as a continuum to the FAO International Treaty on plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, where 64 major food crops hold this status |
3. Facilitate the deposition of microbiome sequences as open-source, accessible for all; establish a sequence database of microbial diversity for the health of man, animal, and plants; for improved resilience to climate change challenges and pandemics |
4. Provide open access microbiome-relevant culture collections as a source of not-patented, safe-to-use, key microbiome species/specimens/consortia, available for microbiome-improvement of soils and for strengthening resilience in humans, crops, trees, and animals (including wildlife) |
5. Stimulate international scientific collaboration within microbiome research, technologies, innovations and uses, including all parts of the world, public and private, for the benefit of health and well-being of humanity; contributing to planetary health |
6. Stimulate public–private collaboration within microbiome research and innovation, enabling products available and accessible for improved microbiome diversity within food ecosystems. IP-protection should be by claiming specific inventive steps only; no broader microbiome use claims |
7. Use microbiome insight for gut health-promoting products also where most needed. Climate change threatens food security in drought-stricken Sub-Saharan Africa; affordable food, made from local residues or processing side-streams can in a fair and just manner improve public health |
8. Stimulate microbiome research with a holistic approach, spanning across different microbiome systems; microbiome research silos delay conceptually new microbiome insight, delaying potentially life-saving innovations and use |
9. Stimulate microbiome research, elucidating conducive conditions for the serious, widespread global obesity and malnutrition pandemics as well as for solutions to support sustainable and responsible agricultural production |
10. Stimulate soil–plant microbiome research, for increased carbon sequestration and N and P (re)cycling, and for monitoring biodiversity (at species and habitat level), identifying climate change-induced changes in microbiome composition and function |
11. Prioritize microbiome research for early warning of pandemics |