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Leaders and experts from around the world discuss food, agriculture, climate change and sustainability – World Food Prize Symposium, Des Moines, Iowa

We’re wrapping up our time here in Des Moines. Today we heard from some of the world’s leading experts and policy makers on solutions to addressing world hunger. Some of the major themes that were echoed throughout the symposium included the need for greater investments in agriculture both on the R & D side and in educating the next generation of agriculture experts; more investments in small-holder farms and infrastructure; better trade policies and regulations; improved access to markets; enhanced knowledge transfer within and between countries and increased public-private partnerships. Below are some quotes and summaries from some of the panelists.

Bill Gates (Founder, Microsoft and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation): “The global effort to help small farmers is endangered by an ideological wedge that threatens to split the movement in two. On one side is a technological approach that increases productivity. On the other side is an environmental approach that promotes sustainability. Productivity or sustainability – they say you have to choose. It’s a false choice, and it’s dangerous for the field. It blocks important advances. It breeds hostility among people who need to work together. And it makes it hard to launch a comprehensive program to help poor farmers. …we need both productivity and sustainability – and there is no reason we can’t have both…”

“The environment also benefits from higher productivity. When productivity is too low, people start farming on grazing land, cutting down forests, using any new acreage they can to grow food. When productivity is high, people can farm on less land…But some people insist on an ideal vision of the environment – divorced from people and their circumstances…Some voices are instantly hostile to any emphasis on productivity. They act as if there is no emergency – even though in the poorest, hungriest places on earth, population is growing faster than productivity, and the climate is changing…Declining yields, at a time of rising population, in a region with millions of poor people, means starvation…”

“We need to take full advantage of these emerging technologies to develop healthy new crop varieties – and we need to make the seeds available to the small farmers who need them.”

Jeffrey Sachs (Director, Earth Institute, Columbia University): Highlighted the case for prioritizing health and nutrition as part of an overall strategy for addressing world hunger. He offered a 10-point plan that included better access to healthy foods worldwide, including in our own country where it’s difficult finding healthy fast foods. His recommendations also included improving nutrition for early childhood development, better and more efficient water use and identifying a permanent venue to discuss the challenges and solutions facing the global population today vis-à-vis hunger and poverty. He suggested that the World Food Prize Foundation serve as that venue. He also added that the planet cannot feed itself with local foods and organic foods.

Hon. Tom Vilsack (Sec. Of Agriculture, USA): Shared Bill Gates sentiment that we need to find out how both productivity and sustainability can be accomplished. There are many technologies that we need to keep an open mind about and we will need to collaborate in order to understand the full suite of solutions that are before us.

H. E. Gerry Ritz (Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, Canada): We need to work together as part of a global trade community and we need to make sure access to the markets is improved. We also need to put more money in science and innovation and the public sector should support this so we can share our knowledge. Biotechnology is one of the solutions for feeding the world. We can produce enough food and fuel for the world.

H.E. Amin Abaza (Minister of Agriculture, Egypt): Egypt has serious environment and natural resource challenges and these will become greater with climate change. Egypt faces large problems and we will need to invest and use science and technology to meet these challenges. We need worldwide agreement on biotechnology.

Carlos Vazquez Ochoa (Minister-Counselor for Agriculture, Mexico Embassy, Washington, DC): If agriculture is to be an engine of growth, we must recognize that investment in small-scale farms is needed. Agriculture has been vastly under-utilized in development. How do we move into action in the face of climate change, global financial crisis and recession? Work together and intensify efforts to collaborate. Improve better transfer of knowledge. We will need nothing less than another technology revolution, including but not limited to biotechnology.

Kanayo Nwanze (Pres., International Fund for Agricultural Development): Agricultural production is essential for development. Farming is a business. We need to improve market access. We do not need new institutions. We need reformed institutions. Also, women make up 70% of the farmers. We need to be sensitive to the way we develop and implement policies & technologies that take into account the important role of women in development and in agriculture/farming. Africa also needs to see African leaders make a commitment to making changes to helping lift people out of poverty. It’s not just a matter of money; it’s what countries DO with the money and it must be driven by results-based programs. It’s about accountability. It’s not good enough to build hope. We must also have accountability.

This is our final day at the symposium. We’d love to hear your comments about some of the discussions. Please post your comments below.

Also, follow us on Twitter and become our fan on Facebook where we’ve provided additional updates and photos.

Indian Regulators Approve BT Eggplant

India’s biotechnology regulators, the Genetically Engineering Appraisal Committee, approved the use of BT eggplants today. The committee will make their recommendation to the Indian government, and with the approval of Parliament, BT eggplants will provide the first biotech vegetables to be produced on local farms. These eggplants are engineered to provide resistance to a devastating natural pest known as the shoot borer, potentially increasing yields by 40%.

“This is fantastic news,” said said Rajeesh Kumar, a vegetable farmer from Swarnapuri, India and a participant in the Global Farmer-to-Farmer Roundtable at the World Food Prize Symposium. “Crop failure has been a problem for many farmers, who often borrow huge sums of money in order to plant. Biotech crops like these eggplant decrease crop failures and we need more technology to come soon.”

 To read more about the Appraisal Committee’s decision, click here.

To learn more about the importance of eggplant production to India and Southeast Asia (28% of total vegetable volume), you can read The International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA) report on BT eggplant here.

Farmers Meet to Discuss Feeding the World

7120_166503579112_147749924112_2528872_7719993_s1Seventeen farmers from around the world gathered for the Global Farmer-to-Farmer Roundtable as part of the World Food Prize Symposium events held in Des Moines, Iowa this week. In its fourth year, the purpose of the gathering is to bring together a diverse group of farmers representing both small and large-scale farms to discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the world’s food producers.

The Roundtable is organized by Truth About Trade and Technology and, this year, is sponsored by the Biotechnology Industry Organization and the Council for Biotechnology Information. As population grows and demand challenges our ability to meet food needs, what are the longterm strategies and technologies used by global farmers to feed the world? Farmers from as far away as Kenya, South Africa, India, China and Australia are meeting to discuss the agricultural needs in their communities. Farmers and agricultural experts from the UK, Ireland, Portugal, Mexico, Chile, Brazil, Honduras, Argentina and the U.S. are also part of the group and each bring a unique perspective on their local agricultural needs. Nations struggling with the question of how to feed more people, sustainably and in harmony with the environment, need only to listen to what some of these farmers have to say.

Here’s what these farmers are saying:

KENYA: Small-scale farmers provide approximately 70 percent of the food for the country. We need access to all technologies to enable us to feed people. This includes agricultural biotechnology, irrigation technology, zero-tillage technology.The government needs to support this.

SOUTH AFRICA: We have the technology and the demand for the food produced, but there’s a lack of support and incentives for investing in R & D and training the next generation of farmers. The cost of farming is prohibitive.

INDIA: We are losing the next generation of farmers as people move to the cities for better education and jobs. In addition to technology, we need incentives for our young people to pursue farming and make it profitable. We can have all the technology in the world, but without people to use it, we won’t have food.

MEXICO: We need a level playing field for all farmers. We cannot deny some farmers access to technologies; those who have the technology cannot fairly compete with those who do. Also, the conversation needs to be more scientific. We need to talk about biotechnology with less emotion and more science.

PORTUGAL: In Europe, we are 10 years behind the U.S. because of all the restrictions and the EU trying to make decisions for all countries regarding use of biotech seeds. We need to make our own choices for using the technology.

IRELAND: In addition to new technologies for plants, we must also consider the health of the soil that we grow our food on.  We need to understand the soil science better.

CHINA: Investments in agriculture is also an investment in our food security. When we grow enough to feed our people, then we know where our food comes from and we have a secure food supply. We have approved the use of biotech rice but it is not yet commercially available.

Stay tuned for more updates on the Roundtable as we move into Day 2. And coming in the next day or so, don’t miss posts/updates on Bill Gates’ first-ever speech on agriculture and global development as well as presentations by Jeffrey Sachs and U.S Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack.

For more frequent updates, please follow us on Twitter at agbiotech and join our Facebook fan page. Be sure to share your thoughts and Re-Tweet!

World Food Prize Foundation – Iowa Hunger Summit

News Stories — Tags: , — CBI — October 2nd, 2009

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The World Food Prize Foundation  is sponsoring the Iowa Hunger Summit on October 13thin recognition of World Food Day. For one day, they have asked Iowans to eat a meal of only 400 calories (the equivalent of 2-16oz bottles of Coca-Cola).  On that day more than 400 Iowans will gather to focus attention on efforts to combat hunger in Iowa and around the world. Participants will explore the plight of millions of people around the world who subsist on 400 calories a day.

“The idea behind those meals is to give normal Iowans sort of a feel for what it might be like to be dependent on various forms of food aid,” foundation spokesman Justin Cremer said. “We hope it gets them thinking about what their life would be like if this was what they were dependent on for their daily meals.”

Do you think you could survive on 2 - 16oz cokes day?
The entire article can be read here.

CBI Remembers Dr. Norman Borlaug

borlaug1The world lost an important scientist and humanitarian over the weekend. Dr. Norman Borlaug, an acclaimed scientist, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and founder of the Green Revolution is remembered not only for his scientific gifts in helping to increase food yields for hunger alleviation but also for mentoring young scientists.

Dr. Borlaug is remembered fondly by the media as a visionary and hero to countless people across the world.

Tributes to Dr. Norman E. Borlaug from around the world
World Food Day Prize

The Father Of the Green Revolution
Washington Post - Joe Holley, J.Y. Smith

“More than any other single person of this age, he has helped provide bread for a hungry world,” the Nobel committee said in honoring him.

Celebrating the Life of a Scientist that “Fed the World”
Sustainablog

It is likely that he saved more human lives than any other person in history. He did it by developing far more productive wheat than had ever been grown.

Norman Borlaug, Plant Scientist Who Fought Famine, Dies at 95
The New York Times – Justin Gillis

Norman E. Borlaug, the plant scientist who did more than anyone else in the 20th century to teach the world to feed itself and whose work was credited with saving hundreds of millions of lives, died Saturday night. He was 95 and lived in Dallas.

Norman Borlaug ‘helped provide bread for a hungry world’
Discovery - The Intersection

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