A Global Agricultural Research Partnership

CGIAR Research Program on Wheat

Led by the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) and the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), the CGIAR Research Program on Wheat (WHEAT) builds on the input, strength, and collaboration of public and private sector partners to catalyze and head an emergent, highly-distributed, virtual global wheat innovation network that will improve productivity and food security in wheat-based cropping areas of the developing world. It couples discovery science in advanced research institutes with national research and extension programs serving the poor in developing countries.

The strategy includes impact-focused research and development for technology targeting, sustainable wheat-based cropping systems, nutrient- and water-use efficiency, productive wheat varieties, durable resistance and management of wheat diseases and pests, enhanced heat and drought tolerance, cutting-edge research to break the wheat yield barrier, more and better seed to farmers, comprehensive use of the native diversity of wheat and its wild relatives, and capacity building.

WHEAT will be implemented with more than 200 partners from:

Partners:
Bioversity International
CIMMYT
Generation Challenge Programme
ICARDA
ICRISAT
IFPRI
ILRI
IRRI
IWMI

Contacts

Victor Kommerell
WHEAT Program Manager
Email: v.kommerell AT cgiar.org

News

Building capacity for wheat production in Uzbekistan

Building capacity for wheat production in Uzbekistan A novel project led by ICARDA in Uzbekistan is stimulating farmers to adopt new and improved wheat varieties and technologies. The project is aimed at increasing the effectiveness and impact of wheat…

Publications

Wheat: a strategic crop for Africa

African countries will spend about US$12 billion to import some 40 million tons
of wheat, used mostly to feed the continent’s rapidly expanding populace. This
constitutes more than a fourth of Africa’s total food import expenditures (USD 40
billion…

Slides

Press Clippings

Videos

Why is wheat a strategic crop for Africa?

Why is wheat a strategic crop for Africa? In the 1990′s, economists considered wheat to be a “minor food” for consumers in sub-Saharan Africa. But wheat is a no longer a minor crop. African countries will spend about US$20 billion to …

Why invest in wheat research?

Wheat is the most important food crop worldwide and a principal source of nutrients in some of the poorest countries of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. But wheat, like all living organisms, is unimaginably complex. CIMMYT scientist Matthew Reynolds be…

W4A Conference Vodcasts – Day 2 Part 2.mov

W4A Conference Vodcasts – Day 2 Part 2.mov Vodcast interviews direct from the Wheat for Food Security in Africa Conference featuring: Awatif Farag Alla – Lecturer, University of Bahri, Sudan Lutangu Makweti – Wheat Breeder, Seedco Zam…