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CGIAR Sets New Research
Agenda
Over 1,000 international and Moroccan scientists and
policymakers attended the CGIAR Annual General Meeting in Marrakech
from December 5-8, 2005. As part of these discussions, participants
approved new approaches in which agricultural research, technology
and food policy initiatives will better stimulate economic growth
in the Central, West Asia and North Africa region and beyond.
The purpose of the Meeting was to generate support for a new
CGIAR research agenda aimed at improving the livelihoods of
low-income people in developing countries through sustainable
agriculture.
"This is a region where agriculture began, and it is a
major contributor to the bread basket of the world" said Ian
Johnson, CGIAR Chairman at the opening of the Science Forum.
"With over 40 percent of the CWANA population dependent on
agriculture for their livelihoods, agriculture and agricultural
research have major roles to play in improving their livelihoods
and enabling poor people to break the bonds of poverty."
In his speech,
he challenged the CGIAR to do more to combat the new and emerging
threats to agriculture such as avian flu and a virulent form of
stem rust fungus, Ug99, that is threatening global wheat
production. He urged participants to consider actions that will
further enhance the effectiveness of the CGIAR as a catalyst of
research-based development, while sharpening its focus on science
and moving forward on aligning research programs in Sub-Saharan
Africa.
New CGIAR Research Priorities
The new agenda includes five
CGIAR research priority areas which are fully compatible with
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
• Sustaining biodiversity for current and future generations
• Producing more and better food at lower cost through genetic
improvements • Reducing rural poverty through agricultural
diversification and emerging opportunities for high-value
commodities and products
• Promoting poverty alleviation and sustainable management of
water, land, and forest resources, and
• Improving policies and facilitating institutional innovation
to support sustainable reduction of poverty and hunger
"These research priorities were identified after rigorous
evaluation coupled with a broad-based consultation strategy,"
said Per Pinstrup-Andersen, Chairman of the CGIAR Science Council.
"We focused on how research can accelerate poverty reduction
keeping in view CGIAR's comparative advantage and the
continuing need for generating international public
goods."
Science and Economic Growth
A further highlight of the meetings was a presentation on
"Scientific Capacity and Economic Growth: Implications for the
CGIAR," by François Bourguignon, World Bank Chief
Economist and Senior Vice President.
He walked participants through the global
research-and-development (R&D) landscape, reviewing conditions
of science and technology (S&T) in developed, middle-income and
low-income countries.
Bourguignon posed two provocative questions to his audience.
First, does research conducted by CGIAR on maize, rice and wheat
which is paralleled by private and public sector research in OECD
countries make producers in low-income countries more
self-sufficient and competitive? Second, how can CGIAR research
speed up the process of diversification and competitiveness gain of
the rural economy? Participants noted hybrid business environments
(relating to intellectual property) may be a model that could be
considered, as well as different partnership models for research in
high-value commodities (including public, private, and civil
society).
World Food Situation
Once very two years, the Washington-based International Food
Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) a CGIAR Center, unveils a major
research report. This year's report on "The World
Food Situation: An Overview," was presented by Joachim von
Braun, Director General, IFPRI. He outlined four overall steps
essential for cutting hunger and poverty in half by 2015:
• Strengthening governance of the food and agriculture system
for action on the ground
• Scaling-up public investment for agriculture and rural
growth
• Taking targeted steps to improve nutrition and health,
and
• Creating an effective global system for preventing and mitigating
disasters
"We must push ourselves not just to cut hunger in half, but
to eradicate it completely," concluded von Braun.
CGIAR Chairman Ian Johnson
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Per Pinstrup-Andersen, Science Council
Chair
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Francois Bourguignon, World Bank Senior
Vice-President and Chief Economist
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Joaquin von Braun, IFPRI Director
General
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Palais des Congres, Marrakech
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