2016 World Food Prize Laureates - Andrade,
Mwanga, Low, and Bouis
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Four scientists have been awarded the 2016 World
Food Prize for enriching sweet potatoes, which resulted in health benefits for
millions of people.
They won the prize for "the single most
example of biofortification", resulting in Vitamin A-boosted crops.
Since 1986, the World Food Prize aims to recognize
efforts to increase the quality and quantity of available food.
The researchers will receive their US$250,000
(£203,000) prize at a ceremony in Iowa, US, on Thursday.
Three of the 2016 laureates - Drs Maria Andrade,
Robert Mwanga and Jan Low from the CGIAR International Potato Center - have
been recognized for their work developing the vitamin-enriched orange-fleshed
sweet potato (OFSP).
The fourth winner, Dr Howard Bouis who founded
HarvestPlus at the International Food Policy Research Institute, has been
honoured for his work over 25 years to ensure biofortification was developed
into an international plant breeding strategy across more than 40 countries.
'Science matters'
Announcing this year's winners, USAID
administrator Gayle Smith said: "These four extraordinary World Food Prize
Laureates have proven that science matters, and that when matched with
dedication, it can change people's lives."
Vitamin A deficiency (VAD) is considered to be
one of the most harmful forms of malnutrition in the developing world. It can
cause blindness, limits growth, weakens immunity and increases mortality.
The condition affects more than 140 million
pre-school children in 118 nations, and more than seven million pregnant women.
It is said to be the leading cause of child blindness in developing countries.
The World Health Organization describes
biofortification as the process "by which the nutritional quality of food
crops is improved through agronomic practices, conventional plant breeding, or
modern biotechnology".
It observes: "Biofortification may therefore
present a way to reach populations where supplementation and conventional
fortification activities may be difficult to implement."
The World Food Prize ceremony will take place
during the the Borlaug Dialogue International Symposium, a three-day gathering
in Des Moines, Iowa, named after Nobel Peace Prize winner Norman Borlaug.
Dr Borlaug, often called the father of the Green
Revolution, established the World Food Prize 30 years ago to recognize
"exceptionally significant" achievements by individuals. In 1970, Dr
Borlaug won the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his contribution to world
peace through his work to increase global food supplies.
A report published at the Borlaug Dialogue warned
that growth in global agricultural productivity (GAP), for the third year in a
row, was not advancing at the rate required to meet future demand for food.
The Global Harvest Initiative's (GHI) seventh
annual GAP report warned that unless this emerging trend was reversed, the
"world may not be able to sustainably provide the food, feed, fibre and
biofuels needed for a booming global population".
According to the GHI, GAP needed to increase by
at least 1.75% each year. However, its latest figures showed that the current
rate was only 1.73%.
Growing the biofortified
crops ensure people get the vital nutrients into people's daily diets S.QUINN/CIP
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GHI executive director Dr Margaret Zeigler said
the agriculture sector had the potential to be a "climate change
mitigation powerhouse".
She added: "Private sector investment,
investment and scale will help more farmers, ranchers and forest managers
access tools and practices that contribute to a low-carbon agricultural
system."
Conflict and hunger
Another factor that was affecting regions'
ability to produce food was conflict and civil unrest. One of the topics at the
2016 Borlaug Dialogue is the issue of national security and food security in
affected regions.
Kenneth Quinn, former US ambassador to Cambodia
and president of the World Food Prize Foundation, stated:
"Just as factors like climate volatility,
water scarcity, inferior infrastructure and post harvest loss can affect
farmers' yields and food reaching urban centres, so too can military conflict
and political instability disrupt markets, impede distribution of new
technologies and innovations to farmers and halt new rural investment."
He added: "Throughout my diplomatic career,
I have seen the incredible transformative power of agricultural development to
undercut the allure and recruiting ability of radical terrorist organizations
in remote areas."
One scientist who had first-hand experience of
the impact of war on agricultural research was Mohmoud Sohl, director-general
of the International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA).
He explained how the Syrian civil war ripping the
country apart had forced his team of researchers to leave the country.
Also left behind was ICARDA's seed bank in
Aleppo, which contained a vast array of samples from many species of staple
food crops' wild relatives, which may hold the genes required to produce future
generations of climate-proof crops. Most of which were collected from the
"fertile crescent", which is widely considered to be the birthplace
of modern agriculture.
However, Dr Sohl disclosed that the team was
now continuing its work in Morocco and Lebanon.
But he added that he would have a clear message
in his speech to delegates at the Borlaug Dialogue.
"You can see the importance of supporting
before they reach that stage, the point I want to say is that the upheaval is
not just political - it is because of poverty, lack of jobs and food
insecurity.
"Many of the migrants are not just because
they are leaving security hotspots, it is because there are few or no
opportunities for them or their families.
Dr Sohl added: "Sustainable development is
needed. Proper investment is needed to ensure people have jobs and a future,
otherwise the problems will mushroom."
Productive
agricultural systems deliver both social and economic benefits for families and
communities S.QUINN/CIP
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On Tuesday, the publishers of the Global Hunger
Index warned that the international community was not making enough progress to
end world hunger by 2030, which is one of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
"The world has made progress in the fight
against hunger but it has so far been too slow," observed Rose Caldwell,
executive director of humanitarian organization Concern Worldwide UK.
"Hunger continues to waste lives and limit
potential - we need urgent action from the global community to wipe it out for
good."
The latest Index in the ongoing series - produced by Concern Worldwide, the International Food Policy Research Institute and German NGO Welthungerhilfe - suggested that if the decline in global hunger rates continued to decline at the rates recorded since the early 1990 then at least 45 nations, including Pakistan, Zimbabwe and Afghanistan, would still have "moderate" to "alarming" hunger scores in 2030.
The latest Index in the ongoing series - produced by Concern Worldwide, the International Food Policy Research Institute and German NGO Welthungerhilfe - suggested that if the decline in global hunger rates continued to decline at the rates recorded since the early 1990 then at least 45 nations, including Pakistan, Zimbabwe and Afghanistan, would still have "moderate" to "alarming" hunger scores in 2030.
Originally published on BBC News
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