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Mexico's foresight in recognizing the potential of international
agricultural research led to the founding of the CGIAR. Nobel
Laureate Norman Borlaug's pioneering research on wheat, which
led to the Green Revolution, began in the mid-1940s under
a program sponsored by Mexico and the Rockefeller Foundation.
That program was the wellspring of CIMMYT,
the global maize and wheat research center established in
1966 by the Government of Mexico and the Rockefeller and Ford
Foundations. In 1971 efforts by the World Bank, FAO and UNDP
led to the creation of a consultative group in which multiple
donors agreed to fund international agricultural research
Centers. CIMMYT became one of the first Centers to come under
the CGIAR umbrella and Mexico became a founding member of
the CGIAR.
Since that time Mexico and CIMMYT together with 14 other
international Centers supported by the CGIAR have made major
contributions to poverty eradication through agricultural
research. Scientists have achieved numerous scientific breakthroughs,
including the development of disease-resistant, drought-tolerant
and more nutritious maize and wheat grown by hundreds of millions
of people worldwide. For every dollar invested in the CGIAR,
$9 worth of additional benefits have been produced in the
developing world.
Today, Mexico is a strong CGIAR supporter, partner and investor,
committed to mobilizing science in the service of poor farming
communities in Mexico, Latin America and the rest of the developing
world.
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