A -~~~~~~ t,.- B - - - 24470 iw * A~~~~~~~~~~~~~~* *AA *m SOUTH AFRICA HOSTS MID-TERM CGIAR WEBSITE MEETING 2001: CGIAR CHARTS SPORTS A NEW LOOK NEW DIRECTIONS IN DURBAN AND CONTENT The Government of South Africa African economy, contributing about 5 uCGIAR. ^ hosted CGIAR's Mid-Term Meeting percent of GDP Agriculture's impact is - - May 21-25, 2001, in the picturesque much larger as it directly provides ' II - . coastal city of Durban in the province nearly 11 percent of the country's jobs 4 ' , of KwaZulu-Natal. Recognizing the and creates employment for another 16 links between agricultural research and percent of the workforce in related sec- key issues on the national and interna- tors. And since agro-industries con- I tional development agenda, the South tribute 37 percent to the GDP, agricul- I z.. African Cabinet declared May 21-25 tural development is a central element ___________________ Agricultural Research Week. of national aspirations, and it is the first The CGIAR's website is growing in popu- Durban was a fitting locale for dis- of seven "presidential imperative pro- cussion of the CGIAR's reform agenda. grams" envisioned by President Thabo laritys and one-stop source for crisp, con- a.r . , . . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~cise, and timely information. Since Janu- Agriculture is a lifeline of the South Mbeki. Continued on page 6 any 2001, the site has received more than 7 million visitors, and during June IFPRI S 2020 VISION ~~~~~~~~~2001 alone, the site received a record IF PRI'S 2 020 V~IS ION half a million visitors. To browse the new C ON F E REN C E: S U S TAINABLE website, please type www.cgiar.org in your browser bar. FOOD SECURITY FOR ALL IFPRI, in collaboration with the Ger- Widespread food insecurity affects Appreciation man Federal Ministry for Economic Coop- 800 million people. Why does hunger a citon eration and Development (BMZ) and oth- persist? Which forces will influence the The CGIAR acknowledges with ers, is hosting a major conference-Sus- prospects for food security in the next grabttude the support and gracious tainable Food Security for All-in Bonn, two decades? Have we set the right pri- hospitality extended by the Germany, September 4-6, 2001. The con- orities and who is responsible for action? Government of South Africa, ference features an impressive array of These questions form the core motiva- through its Ministry of Agriculture speakers, including H. E. Johannes Rau, tion behind the conference organized by and Land Affairs, and the National President of the Federal Republic of Ger- IFPRI's 2020 Vision Initiative with Departnent of Agriculture which many, and H.E. Heidemarie Wieczorek- cosponsors from the public and private led to the successful hosting of the Zeul, Federal Minister for Economic Coop- sectors, and civil society. For more de- CGIARs Mid-Term Meeting eration and Development. CGIAR Chair- tails, click on www.ifpri.org 4f man lanJohnson will also participate. CGIAR NEWS l PAGE 1 BIOTECHNOLOGY BANGLADESH EMERGES AS & SUSTAINABLE A LEADING GROWER DEVELOPMENT: VOICES OF THE OF NUTRITIOUS LENTILS SOUTH & THE NORTH Lentils, a leading source of protein, Bangladesh's traditional varieties, gen- A major conference on biotechnol- iron, and vitamin B, are an increasingly erate stable yields, and carry broad- ogy and sustainable development is popular crop in Bangladesh, with based disease resistance, characteristics scheduled for October 15-17, 2001 at more than 40,000 hectares-about 25 that have prompted thousands of farm- the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, the Li- percent of the area on which lentils are ers to switch from growing traditional brary of Alexandria, Egypt. Ismail Ser- grown in Bangladesh-planted to Bari- varieties. A massive farmer education ageldin, fonmer CGIAR Chairman and masur lentils. These plant varieties, de- campaign has been launched, and over newly-appointed Librarian of Alexan- rived from Middle Eastern lentils pro- the next five years, Barimasur lentils dria chairs the program committee. In vided by ICARDA, have natural resis- are expected to spread rapidly to all addition to the CGIAR and ICARDA, tance to disease, and their larger seed comers of Bangladesh. The release of other major partners and co-sponsors size makes them attractive to con- similarly bred varieties in India, the include the Paris-based United Na- sumers. Farmers growing the Barima- world's largest lentil producer, is also tions Educational, Scientific and Cul- sur lentils have helped add nearly $7 expected. tural Organization (UNESCO), Orga- million to Bangladesh's rural farm Lentils have been around for at least nization for Economic Cooperation economy 8,000 years and were known to the an- and Development (OECD), and the "Lentils are a critical part of cient Egyptians, who placed them in Third World Academy of Sciences Bangladesh's food supply," says Adel El- the tombs of their pharaohs. The van- (TWAS), Trieste, Italy Featured Beltagy, Director General, ICARDA. eties grown in Bangladesh were first speakers include two Nobel Laureates, "They're not only affordable, nutritious, brought to the South Asia region top scientists and decision-makers, and and easy to cook but also easily di- around 1000 BC by Arab tribes rnigrat- civil society representatives (more details including the program available by click- gestible, a characteristic that is ex- ing from the Middle East. includingwthetprogram available by clc - tremely important for young children. For full story see ing on wwwegyptbiotech2p01.com.4 Barimasur lentils produce yields as www.futureharvest.org + much as 40 percent higher than WARDA'S WORK ON NEW RICE FOR AFRICA (NERICA) ENDORSED BY ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION PRESIDENT WARDA's successful efforts to breed WARDA has launched the NERICA of South-South cooperation. African a New Rice for Africa (NERICA) has Consortium for Food Security in Sub- and Asian research partners collabo- won praise from one of the world's Saharan Africa. The new consortium rated to produce the new rice, which is leading scientists, Gordon Conway, brings together a broad range of insti- substantially richer in protein, more President of the Rockefeller Founda- tutions and stakeholders, including tolerant to drought, and more resistant tion. leading national agricultural research to disease than other rice varieties. After visiting farmers' fields in Cote systems, civil society groups, and NERICA produces 50 percent more d'lvoire, Conway said, "NERICA rice farmer organizations in West and Cen- grain and matures 30 to 50 days earlier varieties represent genuine new poten- tral Africa, as well as leading donors than other rice varieties. tial for resource-poor farmers through- such as UNDP, Japan, the World Bank, Rice is a major staple food in sub- out sub-Saharan Africa and should be the African Development Bank, the Saharan Africa. African countries disseminated widely throughout the Rockefeller Foundation, USAID, and spend an estimated $1 billion in scarce continent." Sasakawa 2000. foreign reserves to import 4 million ln cooperation with its partners, WARDh success is a good example tons of rice annually.4 PAGE 2 4 CGIAR NEWS SOUTH SOUTH AFRICA-CGIAR AFRICA DAY PARTNERSHIP YIELDS NEW South Afnca Day got off to a rous- MAIZE VARIETIES ing start with participants visiting Cedara Agricultural Centre, near A highlight of South Africa Day was Pietermaritzburg. The inaugural pro- CIMMYT's announcement of the re- ' - gram featured a stellar cast of speakers: lease of two new maize vanetes- King Zwelithini of the Zulus; Thoko Grace and ZM521-that have 30-50 Didiza, South African Minister of Agri- percent higher yields than traditional A culture and Land Affairs; Narend varieties grown by smallholder farmers Singh, member of the Executive Com- in South Africa's drought-prone, nutri- mittee for Agriculture and Environ- ent-depleted soils. . i mental Affairs in KwaZulu-Natal; "Higher maize yields mean more 4 Bongiwe Njobe, Director General of food and income for poor farmers," j - the South African Agricultural Re- says CGIAR Chairman and World search System; CGIAR Chairman Ian Bank Vice PresidentlIan Johnson. "The , i9 -- - . j Johnson; and others. hardier maize plants will help prevent agricultural expansion in already- r ____________ stressed fragile ecosystems." I N T H I S I S S U E The two varieties have characteris- - I 2 ;3 tics that are specifically valued by ',' 1 South Africa hosts Mid-Term Meeting smallholder farmers. First, they act as a 1 CGIAR Website Sports New Look hedge against hunger. Grace matures -2 I IFPRI's 2020 Vision Conference earlier than traditional maize varieties .: 2 Biotechnology Conference and can be eaten as green maize. The 5'i 2 Bangladesh Emerges as Leading Grower new open-pollinated maize varieties L I of Lentils can have a significant effect on poverty i / 2 WARDA's Research Wins Praise because their seed is cheaper than 3 South Africa Day commercially available hybrids. N 3 South-Africa CGIAR Partnership "We are very proud of the results 4 Climate Change Poses Risks to Poor of our collaborative research," says - Farmers Timothy Reeves, Director General of 7 CGIAR Chairman Visits ICRISAT CIMMYT. "The products are the result 8 Special Symposium on Sub-Saharan of a farmer- and South African-led de- CIMMYT's new maize varieties are valued Africa velopment strategy that is helping to by women farmers in Zimbabwe. 9 Durban Statement make a positive impact in the lives of 10 CGIAR Internal Auditors Meet thousands of poor farmers who have vest means hunger." Banrziger's work 11 New Center Directors Appointed been bypassed by modem technology." on stress-tolerant maize won her the 12 CGIAR Program of Seminars "For a resource-poor farmer who CGIAR's Promising Young Scientist 13 CIAT Joins CONDESAN plants only two hectares of maize, use Award in 1998. 14 China-CGIAR Partnership Strengthens of the new varieties would add more Maize is the dominant staple food 14 IBSRAM-IWMI Research Programs Merge than half a ton to household grain in southern Africa. Per capita con- 15 Announcements stores each year," says Marianne sumption in the region surpasses 100 Banziger, a CIMMYT maize physiolo- kilograms. CIMMYT collaborated ex- Editor: Sarwat Hussain gist based in Zimbabwe. "That is a sig- tensively with South African partners Published by the CGIAR Secretariat nificant contribution to food security to develop the new maize varieties. Tel: (1-202) 473-8951, Fax: (1-202) 473-8110 E-mail: cglar@cgiar.org in isolated areas, where one failed har- Design: Iseman Creative, Inc. CGIAR NEWS fiPAGE 3 CLIMATE CHANGE POSES Scientific evidence about global The effects of climate change on agri- "CGIAR scientists are developing a warming increasingly suggests that the culture can be profound, touching coherent, systemic response to the po- steady warming of the earth's surface nearly all aspects of the agncultural en- tential effects of climate change on agri- temperature has enormous implications terprise. Recent findings from the IPCC culture," said Pedro Sanchez, Director for agriculture and the well-being of indicate that the earth's average surface General of ICRAF and leader of the poor farmers all over the developing temperature could rise by 1.4-5 8 de- CGIAR's Inter-Center Working Group world. This was the mam message of grees Celsius (2.5-10.4 degrees Fahren- on Climate Change. "Our research must the CGIAR annual report for 2000, The heit) over the next 100 years. Such an help poor farmers adapt to the conse- Challenge of Climate Change: Small increase is more than 60 percent higher quences of climate change and mitigate Farmers at Risk, released at a press con- than predictions scientists made just five its deletenous effects." ference held in Durban, May 23, 2001. years ago. It would represent the most Some examples of CGIAR research "The IPCC has wamed that the lat- rapid climate change in 10,000 years. already underway: est scientific evidence points strongly "A warmer world will surely impact u CGIAR scientists are working to re- toward a steadily warming world in the the yields of staple crops, increase the duce tillage in rice-wheat rotations 21st century," said Dr. Robert T. Wat- incidence of pests, and exacerbate in the Indo-Gange-tc Plains, the son, Chairman of the Umted Nations drought - all with profound effects on most intensely cropped agricultural Intergovernmental Panel on Climate the well-being of small farmers in devel- land in the world. This work will Change (IPCC) and World Bank chief oping countries," said CGIAR Chair- help reduce large amounts of car- scientist. In launching the report, he man Ian Johnson at the press confer- bon emissions (by cutting tractor stated that "The question is no longer ence. "As an intemational public re- use). This innovative effort involves whether the earth's climate will change, search organization, the CGIAR's chal- CIMMYT, CIP, ICRISAT, IRRI, and but rather how much it will change, lenge is to mobilize the best of science IWMI. how fast, and where." for poor farmers at risk." Speakers at the press conference launching CGIAR Annual Report "The Challenge of Climate Change: Poor Farmers at Risk." Seated (from L to R) Bongiwe Njobe, Director General, National Department of Agnculture, South Afnca; Ian Johnson, CGIAR Chairman; Robert Watson, Chairman, Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change and Chief Scientist, The World Bank; and Pedro Sanchez, Director General, ICRAF oww PU uECI NEWS PAGE 4 CGIAR NEWS J~~~ - s ,_ LISKS TO POOR FARMERS * Agroforestry-planting trees on Global climate change is inexorably farms-has the highest potential to ,, linked to the CGIAR's goals of food se- soak up atmospheric carbon, at rates Through our partnership curity, poverty reduction, and environ- of approximately three tons per with CGIAR scientists, we mental protection. By focusing its an- hectare per year. CGIAR scientists are nual report on this important topic, the converting degraded croplands and are laying a solid founda- CGIAR is helping to bring the drivers grasslands into agroforestry systems of global climate change into the agri- that are estimated to save 390 million tion for improving our cultural research and capacity-building metric tons of carbon from being agenda for the ultimate benefit of de- emitted into the atmosphere per year strategies to anticipate, veloping countries. by the year 2010. This effort is led by mitigate, and cope with The Challenge of Climate Change: ICRAE Small Farmers at Risk is available at the * MarkSim, a computer model devel- climate change," CGIAR website, www.cgiar.org.4 oped at CIAT and ILRI, can simulate weather data and predict day-by-day - Bongiwe Njobe rainfall and temperature information for any point in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The information obtained from MarkSim will help poor farmers Agriculture is the economic main- accurately predict yields of staple food stay in most African countries, con- crops. tributmng about 35 percent of GNP, 40 percent of exports, and 70 percent of * Climate change specialists have long employment. About 70 percent of agreed that forestry and land-use Africa's poor live in rural areas. Accord- changes in the tropics are, on balance, ing to the IPCC, the main challenges large sources of greenhouse gas emis- facing Africans will emanate from trop- sions. CIFOR has been working on icas s, f roug tsla- the management and use of forests to ical storms, floods, droughts, land- ,, theq gemten c arondo rduse o remistsito slides, abnormal sea-level rises, and , . ' i;, * seuenuste arbon to reduce etmisios- other extreme weather expected to re- ' ;:i ' 1 ofgreeThouse gasesh tso thexatmies sult from climate change. These events phere. This research also examines the opportunities and risks to local will increase problems of pollution, communities, a major concern of gov- sanitation, waste disposal, water sup- ernments and environmental groups. ply, public health, infrastructure, and Preliminary results of this work have production technologies. been presented as policy briefs that "Through our partnership with help to inform and guide public poli- CGIAR scientists, we are laying a solid cymakers about the need to increase foundation for improving our strate- economic opportunities for local gies to anticipate, mitigate, and cope communities and protect livelihoods with climate change," said Bongiwe of people in project areas. Njobe, Director General of the South African National Department of Agri- culture. CGIAR NEWS 46 PAGE 5 _ t I K NEW DIRECTIONS IN DURBAN Continuedfrom page I In Durban, CGIAR members and for October 29-November 2, 2001, in Summit, and discussions such as the stakeholders took strong actions to rein- Washington, DC. (Task Force Co- ones held in Durban will help to restore vigorate the system and to strengthen its Chairs: Emmy Simmons, USA, and the importance of agriculture to its right- potential to make a difference in the fight Gilles Saint-Martin, France). ful place in public policy debate, both at against hunger, poverty, and environmen- a The science council will ensure that the summit and beyond." tal degradation. the science practiced by the Centers The meeting was a landmark event in In brief, the CGlAR decided to estab- continues to meet the highest interna- other ways as well. South Africa Day and lish new "challenge programs" that re- tional standards for quality and rele- Sub-Saharan Africa Agricultural Research spond directly to major concerns on the vance and is consistent with develop- Day dominated the proceedings. They global development agenda. In addition, ment priorities. (Task Force Co- were attended by nearly 500 of the it decided to limit meetings of the CGIAR Chairs: Lauritz Holm-Nielsen, Den- world's top agricultural scientists, policy to once a year and conduct business mark, and Joseph Mukiibi, Uganda). makers, and civil society representatives. through a small executive council be- "Agriculture and its sustaining force, tween annual meetings; to transform the agricultural research, are at the heart of CGIAR Technical Advisory Committee any realistic effort to build the compo- (TAC) into a science council consisting "Agriculture and its nents of sustainable development," said of a few, high-level science policy strate- sustai ning force, Thoko Didiza, the South African Minister gists; and to establish a CGIAR system of- of Agriculture and Land Affairs. "We are fice to facilitate coherence and cost-effec- agricultural research, are delighted to host the CGIAR meeting be- tiveness in system management. cause we want to strengthen our partner- To accelerate implementation of these at the heart of any ship with some of the best minds work- actions, four Task Forces have been estab- relisti ffort t buId ing in agricultural research." lished together with a dedicated web site Iealsc efo o ui In addition to discussing traditional and listservs to facilitate communication. the components of topics such as challenges in improving *Challenge programs will elevate the crop productivity, natural resource man- significance of CGIAR-supported re- sustainable development" agement, and soil fertility, CGIAR mem- search by aligning it more closely bers focused attention on some of the with international development goals -Thoko Didiza most serious issues facing Africa: from and opening up. the CGIAR to the risks posed by climate change, to the broader research partnerships. Over costs and cures of foot-and-mouth dis- time, these programs will induce ease, to the impact of the HIV/AIDS pan- structural change among the interna- d The system office will bring cohesion demic that is threatening agricultural tional centers. (Task Force Co-Chairs: through an integrated communica- production in some of the poorest parts Eliseo Ponce, Philippines, and Klaas tion, public awareness and fundrais- of sub-Saharan Africa. Tamminga, Netherlands). ing strategy. It will help the Centers to "Despite progress, the development work better as a system and attract agenda continues to grow. We must con- aThe work of the executive council, new donors. (Task Force Co-Chairs: front environmental threats, including based on "new age" modes, will lead Hans-Jochen de H-aas, Germany, and climate change, water scarcity, land to clarity, focus, and speed in deci- Meryl J. Williams, Australia). deration, l o dersity, and sion-making. An interim executive degradation, loss of biodiversity, and council was formed and held its first CGIAR Chairman Ian Johnson em- HIV/AIDS," said Johnson. "Agriculture meeting on May 25, 2001. In line phasized that the reform program will alone cannot solve these problems, but it with the recommendations, Interna- help ensure CGIAR science is closely can make a big dent in reducing poverty tional Centers Week will henceforth linked with the international develop- and hunger and promoting growth. The be called the Annual General Meeting ment agenda. "Next year, South Africa CGIAR meeting in South Africa was crit- (AGM). The first AGM is scheduled will be hosting the Johannesburg Earth ical for charting the way forward."} PAGE 6 -& CGIAR NEWS LINKING RESEARCH TO PEOPLE CGIAR CHAIRMAN VISITS ICRISAT AND FINDS "A RECIPE FOR SUCCESS" Most people know of peanut butter, * 1 one of America's favorite foods. But few ; have heard of tigadege, a peanut paste , that has for centuries been the most , popular ingredient for making sauce in Niger and Mali in West Africa. Few also know that groundnuts, or peanuts as -_ they are called in North America, are largely grown by smallholder farmers in the semi-arid tropics (SAT). fljJJ Such interesting facts greeted Ian Johnson, CGIAR Chairman and World j- Bank Vice President for Environmen- E tally and Socially Sustainable Develop- -I1 um I ment, when he visited the Patancheru *-f headquarters of ICRISAT in February 2001. 9 Groundnut is one of five ICRISAT mandate crops. Concern over aflatoxin , _ (a toxin produced by a mold) in CGIAR Chairmnan Johnson visits "SatVenture" - a display for visitors showcasing rural groundnut has been growing. Aflatoxin semi-arid tropics and how ICRISAT's research is making a difference in the lives of the in food and feed has been found to region's farmers cause liver cancer and is a big health risk to both human beings and animals. program of the Indian Council of Agri- support when the groundnut crop cov- "A collaborative project led by cultural Research and a community- ering nearly 300,000 hectares-the ICRISAT led to the development of very managed watershed in a nearby village. largest groundnut growing belt in the cheap kits that can be used by our na- He was briefed about the joint ICRISAT- world-was devastated by a deadly dis- tional partners and health officials to ILRI project on improving the nutri- ease last year. ICRISAT researchers detect aflatoxins," says William D. Dar, tional quality of SAT crop residues for made a quick breakthrough by identify- ICRISAT Director General. Dr. Dar ruminants. ing the attack as an outbreak of peanut noted that such successes are possible "The impact has been spectacular," stem necrosis disease caused by a new because ICRISAT takes its corporate said Dr. Dar. "Over 400 improved vari- virus-and not peanut bud necrosis, as motto-science with a human face- eties of ICRISAT mandate crops have was previously thought. This diagnosis seriously. "In consultation with our been released around the world, yield- helped speed mitigation efforts. partners, we have formulated a work ing over US$ 200 miflion in benefits to "I was really impressed by the qual- plan with a clear idea of how our re- poor farmers across the entire SAT re- ity of science and the degree of owner- search effort will deliver real benefits to gion." ship that the state government has ex- the most disadvantaged people in the During the visit, Mr. Johnson also hibited toward ICRISAT," said Johnson SAT." paid a courtesy visit to Mr. N. Chan- in concluding remarks. "I think that the Johnson also saw ICRISAT's partner- drababu Naidu, the dynamic Chief ICRISAT partnership is a very promis- ship in action when he visited the Cen- Minister of Andhra Pradesh state, ing way of building the kind of alliances tral Research Institute for Dryland Agri- which hosts ICRISAT. Mr. Naidu ex- that the CGIAR has to continue to de- culture (CRIDA), a leading national pressed his appreciation for ICRISAT's velop as we move into the future." & CGIAR NEWS 14i PAGE 7 SYMPOSIUM FOCUSES ON AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA "Agriculture must be put back on search in Africa (FARA)'s vision for the development map," said Ian John- African agricultural research and the son, CGIAR Chairman and World " The way forward is to CGIAR strategy for Sub-Saharan Africa Bank Vice President for Environmen- as well as the four pillars of germplasm tally and Socially Sustainable Develop- build on the gains and natural resource management, ment, in inaugural remarks at the Sub- . technology dissemination, policy re- Saharan Africa Agricultural Research already made . search, and capacity building-that are Day conference. "We have to do that only through absolutely essential to support a strate- at the World Bank, the United Nations, gic action plan," said Kanayo Nwanze, and the CGIAR and in governments, partnerships that we Chairman of the Center Directors the private sector, and civil society. Committee on Sub-Saharan Africa and Agriculture's importance must pervade can hope to make a Director General of WARDA. all discussions we have on sustainabil- "Strengthened, inclusive partnerships ity and sustainable development," he major impact on the are the way forward." added. *g Itu IlCGIAR has been a strong partner in The conference, a major highlight agriculura the overall agricultural development of Agricultural Research Week, was development challenges effort in sub-Saharan Africa. Four Cen- hosted by the Republic of South Africa. ters (ICRAF, IITA, ILRI, and WARDA) The conference's overarching purpose facing Africa." are headquartered in the region, and was to explore ways of jump-starting most Centers have research programs growth and development in SSA-a - Joseph Mukiibi underway in the region. global strategic priority. A majority of Other speakers included Guido the participants were African. They Gryseels of CGIAR's Technical Advi- represented a diverse range of view- sory Committee; Bongiwe Njobe of the points: the public and private sectors, based on an ABCD approach-Asset- South African National Department of national research programs, regional Based Community Development-in Agriculture; Geoffrey Mrema of Associ- organizations, and civil society. which the operative words are assets ation for Agricultural Research in East Agriculture and agricultural re- and community." Rukuni's paper and Central Africa (ASARECA); search must serve as the engine of "Challenges and Opportunities for Keoagile Molapong of Southern growth in sub-Saharan Africa. About Sub-Saharan Africa" made a seminal African Centre for Cooperation in Agri- 70 percent of Africa's poor live in rural contribution to the conference. cultural Research and Training (SAC- areas, and rural populations will con- A major outcome of the conference CAR); Ndiaga Mbaye of Conseil Ouest tinue to outnumber urban populations was "The Durban Statement-Way et Centre Africain pour la Recherche et for nearly three decades to come. Agri- Forward for Agricultural Research and le Developpement Agricoles culture accounts for about 35 percent Development in Sub-Saharan Africa" (CORAF/WECARD); and Per Ryden of of the region's GNP, 40 percent of ex- (see box on pages 9 & 10). The state- Global Mechanism, United Nations ports, and 70 percent of-employment. ment, a road map that represents the Convention to Combat Desertification "Farmers need technology," said collective vision and aspirations of (UNCCD). Mandivamba Rukuni, Chairman of African leaders, was signed by all major "The way forward is to build on the Zimbabwe's Agricultural Research regional organizations and the CGIAR- gains already made," said Joseph Council and program director of the supported Future Harvest Centers. Mukiibi, Director General of the Ugan- WK. Kellogg Foundation. "Africa's "We have identified several ele- dan National Agricultural Research overall development strategy should be ments-Forum for Agricultural Re- Organization (NARO) and Chairman PAGE 8 + CGIAR NEWS | -" ' ,i!~ * ' . -I ,,,,, ;-' | * ->- - t--- , I tJIBr - - '. ' , --, = ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~- K . _-; _ F. -.- o~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I i i - * -, I -~ A IL~~~~~~~ Speakers at the press conference launching "The Durban Statemnent." Seated (from L to R) Njabulo Nduli and Bongiwe Njobe of the South Afrncan National Department of Agriculture; Joseph Mukziibi, National Agricultural Research Organization, Uganda; and Hans Btnswanger The World Bankz of FARA. "Agriculture must receive EXCERPTS FROM THE DURBAN STATEMENT due place on the agenda of the Johan- nesburg Earth Summit next year. It is TeWyFradfrAgiutrlRsac n only through partnerships that we can TeW yFradfrAnuftrlRsac n hope to make a major impact on the Development in Sub-Saharan Africa agiulua deelpmn chlene 1 Agriculture IS the engine for Improved rural livelihoods and'economic development facing Afrca." In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) Recognizing this, African political leaders have pOSI- At th conludig sesion Han tioned agriculture at the center of their new vision for the future of the continent. Bmswanger, the World Bank Sector Di- rector for Environment, Rural and So- 2 The African vision envisages that by 2020, the region should have dynamic agricul- cial Development in the Africa region, tural markets, be a net exporter of agricultural products, have food available at af- made an impassioned plea for urgently fordable prices, develop a culture of sustainable use'of natural resources, and po- addressig the secial chllengessition Itself as a strategic player In agricultural science and technology develop- posed by HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan ment. Africa. The pandemic has the potential 3 The target growth rate of 6 percent per annum cannot be achieved without a fo- to severely curtail agricultural growth, cused and market-driven technology development and transfer system, an enabling hobble whole economies, and reverse policy environment, and effective Institutions.a hard-won gains. 4 The considerable efforts and financial Investments that have been made by national The meeting ended with a vote of and international institutions over the past 30 years have had limited payoff. At pre- thanks to Moctar Toure, outgoing Ex- sent, SSA IS dealing with first-order challenges of Increasing agricultural productiv- ecutive Secretary of Special Program ity, and newer challenges-urbanization, globalization, lack of market competitive- for African Agricultural Research ness, resource degradation, and HIV/AIDS-are threatening the potential of agri- (SPAAR), and Manuel Lantin, CGIAR culture to contribute to sustainable economic development Science Advisor. Continued on page 10. CGIAR NEWS XgPAGE 9 DURBAN STATEMENT EXCERPTS CGIAR Continued from page 9 INTERNAL 5 To address these challenges, we, the members of the SSA agricultural research AUDITORS M EET and development community, recognize that effective and broadened partner- The first CGIAR seminar for intemal ships are essential. The national agricultural research systems (NARS) must play audirs CGIAR staff, intemaI a central role in these partnerships. African countries have made considerable ef- auditors and finance staff, "Internal Au- forts over the past decades to develop a solid research infrastructure. They have diting Practices and Concepts for the strengthened regional collaboration through the formation and development of 21st Century" was held at the Institute sub-regional organizations (SROs) and, more recently, through the creation of the of Internal Auditors Inc. (IIA) in May in Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA). Other partners, including the Florida. Internal auditors and finance CGIAR-supported Future Harvest Centers, have similarly responded to the chal- staff from 14 Centers participated. lenge through more intensive consultation with NARS and greater collaboration The seminar's objectives were to among themselves. introduce new internal auditing 6 The way forward is to build on gains already made. We agree to pursue the stated concepts and tools to increase effi- vision by developing arid disseminating technologies for increased agricultural ciency and accountability in the productivity and sound natural resource management, utilizing the benefits of- CGIAR, discuss common issues and fered by emerging technologies (information and communication technology and knowledge for a better understanding safe use of biotechnology); adopting the principle of inclusive partnerships; and of internal auditing practices, and using trained human resources, increased and sustained financing, and effective foster a network of CGIAR internal institutions. auditors to share best practices. 7. On the occasion of the CGIAR Mid-term Meeting held in Durban, South Africa, "As publicly funded institutions, we call on SSA governments to translate political commitment to agricultural de- CGIAR-supported Centers are unam- velopment into concrete actions by providing resources, creating an enabling pol- biguously committed to ensuring the icy and institutional environment, and ensuring that sustainable agriculture is on highest levels of integrity in financial the agenda of the Johannesburg Earth Summit. FARA and the Global Forum on processes," said Hock-Chye Ong, Agricultural Research must play an advocacy role for placing agricultural research Director, CGIAR Internal Audit, who is at the center of the SSA development agenda, and the international investor com- based at IRRI. "By their work, internal munity must coordinate its efforts and significantly increase financial support for auditors can help ensure that these African agricultural research. The CGIAR, advanced research institutions, and standards are consistently met." other components of the international agricultural research system should forge A major highlight of the seminar effective partnerships with African NARS and achieve greater programmatic inte- was an inspirational speech by J. Gra- gration. Finally, changes underway in the CGIAR should reinforce efforts to ham Joscelyne, Auditor General of the achieve the African vision. World Bank Group. Louis Wong, a for- mer General Auditor of the Asian De- * Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA) velopment Bank spoke on the "Eco- * Special Program for African Agricultural Research (SPAAR) nomic Impact of Corruption and the Anti-Corruption Strategy and Experi- * Association for Agricultural Research in East and Central Africa (ASARECA) ence of the Asian Development Bank". * Conseil Ouest et Centre Africain pour la Recherche et le Developpement Participants explored new internal Agricoles (CORAF/WECARD) auditing standards, internal control * Southern African Centre for Cooperation in Agricultural Research and Training models, risk management, internal (SACCAR) auditing services, audit and technology tools, and interactions between the * Future Harvest Centers supported by the CGIAR ato m ie and management. audit committees and management. Durban, South Africa-May 22, 2001 Participants are considering joining AIAs Global Auditing Information Net- The complete Durban Statement is available at www.cgiar.org. 4&g work (GAIN), of which ICARDA is already a member. 4k PAGE 10 X CGIAR NEWS FOUR NEW CENTER DIRECTORS APPOINTED The Boards of Trustees of four Centers-CIFOR based in Bogor, Indonesia; ICRAF and ILRI based in Nairobi, Kenya; and IITA based in Ibadan, Nigeria-announced the selection of new directors general for their Centers. Each CGIAR-supported Center is an autonomous institution, with an independent board. The appointments were made at the culmination of international searches. Brief profiles are sketched below. CIFOR David Kaimowitz has been selected ing ICRAF in 1992, he successfully ters. He also served as private sector ad- as the new Director General o[ the Cen- built one of the largest research pro- visor for USAID in Tanzania, and be- ter for Intemational Forestry Research grams covering Southeast Asia, with lieves that training is a fundamental di- (CIFOR) and will take up that position more than 40 international and na- mension of development. in August 2001. An economist by train- tional professional staff working in six Dr. Hartmann received an M.S. in ing, Dr. Kaimowitz joined CIFOR in countries. His work on developing agricultural marketing and a Ph.D. in 1995 and until recently was the team agroforestry altematives to slash-and- agricultural policy and marketing from leader of CIFOR's program on underly- bum agriculture is widely recognized, the University of Illinois. ing causes of deforestation, forest as are his efforts to develop institu- degradation, and changes in human tional innovations related to farmer-led ILRI welfare, which investigates ways in organizations in sustainable agriculture Carlos Sere was named Director which policies and social trends out- and natural resources management. He General of the Intemational Livestock side the forest sector affect forests and has actively promoted the landcare Research Institute (ILRI), and will suc- the people who rely on them for daily movement in Southeast Asia. ceed Director General Hank Fitzhugh needs and income. He has conducted Dr. Garrity received a B.Sc. in agri- in December 2001. For the last seven research in Latin America, Africa, and culture from Ohio State University, an years, Dr. Sere has worked for the Latin Asia. M.Sc. in agronomy from the University America and Caribbean office of the In- Dr. Kaimowitz completed a B.A. de- of Philippines at Los Bafios, and a ternational Development Research gree in development studies at the Uni- Ph.D. in crop physiology from the Uni- Centre (Canada), first managing a versity of Califomia-Berkeley and re- versity of Nebraska. portfolio of agricultural and natural re- ceived M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in agri- source management projects and later cultural economics from the University IITA serving as regional director. His exper- of Wisconsin-Madison. He has pub- Peter Hartmann will be the sixth Di- tise includes tropical livestock produc- lished widely and wants to strengthen rector General of the Intemational In- tion systems, foot-and-mouth disease, the special relationship that exists be- stitute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), smallholder dairy farming, tropical tween CIFOR and its host country, In- succeeding Lukas Brader in November pastures, and quantification of the donesia. 2001. An expert in agricultural eco- costs and benefits of research. His nomics, policy, and marketing, he has CGIAR experience includes working at ICRAF worked in Africa, and Latin America CIAT and CIP and serving as reviewer Dennis Garrity has been appointed and the Caribbean. He was Director of of the Intemational Laboratory for Re- fourth Director General of the Intema- International Programs at the Univer- search on Animal Diseases (ILRAD, tional Centre for Research in Agro- sity of Florida, where he helped de- whose merger with ILCA led to the for- forestry (ICRAF). He will succeed velop institutional linkages with uni- mation of ILRI). Pedro Sanchez in October 2001. Dr. versities in Cameroon, Honduras, the Dr. Sere hails from Uruguay and re- Garrity brings a wealth of CGIAR ex- Netherlands, Nicaragua, Nigeria, and ceived a Ph.D. in agricultural econom- perience to the position, having Uganda as well as with intemational ics from the University of Hohenheim, worked at IRRI for 12 years. After join- and national agricultural research cen- Germany. 4 CGIAR NEWS -4 PAGE 11 CGIAR PROGRAM OF SEMINARS Helping farmers to better manage parcels of land. It follows that they ment, at the Millennium Conference land and water resources and battling would perform well in the highly fertile held last year, U.N. Secretary General livestock disease are some of the ways in areas of Rwanda. To test the hypothesis, Kofi Annan said, "We need a 'Blue Rev- which CGIAR scientists help promote trials were conducted on a transect olution' in agriculture that focuses on sustainable agriculture for food security going from the poorest, most acidic, de- increasing productivity per unit of in developing countries. This year's graded, and eroded soils on the Nile water-more crop per drop." meeting in Durban featured major pre- Zaire crest, down to the more fertile Ensuring the availability of water for sentations by the Centers on three sig- areas. Much to everyone's surprise, food and environmental security was the nificant topics: integrated natural re- adoption rates were highest in the high- focus of a presentation by David Molden, sources management, improved man- altitude, low-fertility areas. Why? Be- Principal Researcher, IWMI. In explor- agement of water, and livestock disease. cause farmers concentrated organic ing anew the question of productivity of matter and the small amounts of fertil- water in agriculture, IWMI conducted a Integrated Natural Resources izer they could buy on small plots so "water accounting exercise" in the irri- Management and the CGIAR that they could double their returns by gated area in Chistian, Pakistan. Of the "How we value and use natural re- growing climbing beans. And the stak- 740 million cubic- meters of water that sources, as commodities for trade, or ing material, essential for climbing entered the area from irrigation deliver- for non-trade functions, or even for en- beans, required adoption of agroforestry ies, rain, and groundwater, nearly 90 vironmental services," are questions systems. Therefore, farmers weretable to percent was used by agriculture. The that can be best answered by using an create a triple win situation: reduced finding clearly indicated that manage- integrated natural resources manage- erosion, improved soil fertility, and ment of water in agriculture is the key to ment (INRM) framework, said Joachim greatly enhanced productivity. solving the water crisis. "From an IWMI Voss, Director General, CIAT, and As a framework, INRM allows re- perspective, in essence, the global chal- Chairman of the Inter-Center Task searchers to capture contextual factors. lenge for us is to grow more food with Force on INRM. Hence it can benefit work on global is- less water - decreasing water use in agri- INRM is where the "brown side" of sues such as climate change, the water culture to meet environmental goals and agriculture meets the "green side" of crisis, conservation and use of genetic other human needs," said Molden. enviromnent. It helps CGIAR scientists resources, desertification, and conser- "IWMI research must provide feasible, to better understand the context of the vation of the Amazon. sustainable choices and solutions that do problems on which they are working An international "Integrated Man- not exist today" and the context and systems for which agement for Sustainable Agriculture, "Can the CGIAR solve the world they must develop solutions. Forestry, and Fisheries" workshop will water crisis?" That provocative ques- INRM is a conscious process for in- be held in Cali, Colombia, August tion was posed by Frank Rijsberman, corporating multiple aspects of natural 28-31. Director General, IWMI. Rijsberman resource use into a system of sustain- reported that IWMI is developing a able management to meet farmers and Solving the World's Water Crisis - new program, Comprehensive Assess- others' explicit production goals (in- A CGIAR Perspective ment of Water Management, with cluding those tied to profitability and Agriculture is a profligate user of strong support from ICARDA, risk reduction) and to provide broad water. Seventy percent of all water ICRISAT, IRRI, ICLARM, and IFPRI. environmental and social benefits. withdrawn is used for irrigation. Other Future attempts to achieve food secu- As an approach to management of pressures-pollution, salinization, ris- rity, reduce poverty, and protect the en- complex technical change and dealing ing demand for drinking water from vironment will require a paradigm with complexity, INRM itself need not teeming cities, industrialization, and shift, one that requires a systematic ex- be complex. Voss offered a counter-intu- the need for ecological services-are amination of productivity in yield per itive example from ClAT's research to reducing the overall availability of unit of water as well as yield per unit of make this point. Climbing beans have water. Recognizing the threat of the land, said Rijsberman. Also needed, he tremendous potential on small, fertile water crisis to sustainable develop- said, is an integrated, systemwide ap- proach encompassing genetic improve- PAGE 12 4f CGIAR NEWS L~~~~~~~~~~~~~6 ment, better management of soil water dous disincentive," said Fitzhugh. and soil fertility, improved delivery of "What incentive do the poor have to in- water services, as well as a participatory vest in better feed, better genetics, bet- CIAT JOINS approach to natural resources manage- ter health care if their animals are at risk C ON DES AN ment with a focus on resource-poor of death and loss?" he asked. farmers. "The answer from IWMI to In Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Di- the provocative question is a resound- amond points out the consequences of CIAT has joined the Andean ecore- ing "'Yes,"' said Rijsberman. major diseases originating in livestock gional program CONDESAN (Con- and infecting humans in the New sortium for the Sustainable Devel- Costs and Cures of Livestock World and Pacific Islands during the opment of the Andes) and will con- Disease - A CGIAR Perspective past 13,000 years. Those consequences tribute to the program through its "Livestock disease has been etched in are only the tip of the proverbial ice- community-based watershed re- our collective memory as never before, berg. A University of Edinburgh study source management project usually said Hank Fitzhugh, Director General, found that 1,709 organisms cause dis- souc managemen Project,.usuall ILRI, in kicking off a special seminar on eases in people and that nearly 50 per- known as the Hillsides Project. CIP is livestock disease and its implications for cent of those organisms (called already a member of CONDESAN. trade and agricultural competitiveness. zoonoses) are naturally transmitted "We are very pleased with CIAT's The recent outbreak of foot-and-mouth from animals to people. Of the 1,709 decision to join CONDESAN" said (FMD) disease has caused enormous organisms, 156 cause the fairly new JaimeTola,PresidentoftheCONDE- losses running into billions of dollars in diseases, such as ebola and BSE, that SAi Toa, Pres tof t cond- the United Kingdom, said Fitzhugh. The make the headlines. Of those 156 or- disease affected nearly every farm there ganisms, 114 are zoonoses. erably strengthens the CGIAR-CON- and caused a major setback to Britain's Milk-borne diseases-tuberculosis, DESAN partnership." tourism industry. brucellosis, and a variant of E. coli, CIAT's Hillsides Project is recog- Why should the CGIAR care about 157-pose serious threats to human nized for addressing critical re- livestock diseases? Quite simply, be- health, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, cause of their adverse impacts on the where 80 to 90 percent of milk is not source management issues by de- food security, nutrition, health, and pasteurized. Pasteurization increases veloping decision-support tools that well-being of poor rural communities. the cost of milk by 30 percent in rural combine the best of scientific re- But we should also care about them for areas, and by nearly 70 percent in peri- search with participatory methods reasons of enlightened self-interest, urban areas. To avoid milk-borne dis- and farmers' knowledge in Central suggested Fitzhugh. Globalization of ease the poor generally boil their milk. America. CIAT will also bring its disease allows an influenza virus to hop ILRI's pro-poor research focuses on knowledge and experience in maize, on a jet plane and cross continents. the acquisition of knowledge about dis- bean, and forage commodity re- A livestock revolution is underway, eases, their causes, and their conse- search to the ecoregional issues ad- reported Fitzhugh. Demand for meat quences. Working with partners, ILRI and milk products is expected to more is developing diagnostics, vaccines, dressed by CONDESAN. than double during the next 20 years. and various therapeutics. The Institute CONDESAN was established in Livestock disease results in lost produc- is also working on effective delivery 1993 in response to growing interest tion potential and diminished market- services. A good vaccine that is not de- in natural resource management ing opportunities for the poor. More- livered in viable form, or not delivered and ecoregional research within the over, the poor are the people who live at all, is useless. close to livestock and run the risk of The session also featured presenta- CGIAR. CONDESAN brings together contracting transmitted diseases. Trade tions on FMD outbreak in KwaZulu- a coaltion of 75 development insti- standards and in-country regulations Natal Province, South Africa, and by the tutions in the Andes.}i and restrictions also work against the World Organization for Animal Health, poor. "Livestock disease is a tremen- known by its French acronym OIE. 4s CGIAR NEWS 4- PAGE 13 CHINA-CGIAR PARTNERSHIP 2000 CGIAR STRENGTHENS SCIENCE CGIAR's partnership with the Peoples Republic of China received a boost with AW ARD S the opening of a new Secretariat office in Beijing on February 23, 2001. Established as China Leading Group for Coordination of China-CGIAR Cooperation, the of- fice is housed at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science (CAAS) and will be responsible for coordination of collaboration between the CGIAR and Chinese agricultural research institutions. Dr. Zhao Longyue will chair the group. . l I The inaugural ceremony was chaired by Dr. Zhang Lijian, Vice President of CAAS. Making presentations were Mr. Liu Jian, Vice Minister of Agriculture; Dr. - Zhao Longyue, Deputy Director General of the Department of Intemational Co- - operation at the Ministry of Agriculture; and Professor Lu Feijie, President of CAAS. Dr. Ren Wang, Deputy Director General of IRRI, represented the CGIAR. to Alberto Barrion, IRRI, Researchers from CIFOR, CIMMYT, CIP, ILRI, and IPGRI attended the ceremony. Outstanding Local Scientist The new Secretariat will play a key role in strengthening the China-CGIAR partnership and helping ensure that the fruits of agricultural research benefit *- R China's farming communities. Currently, 11 Centers have formral links with Chi- nese research institutions, and five Centers operate offices in Beijing. 4 - _ IBSRAM AND IWMI RESEARCH PRO GRAMS MERGE to Ellen Payongayong, IFPRI, Outstanding Local Scientific Support Staff CGIAR's expertise in sustainable land and water management was strengthened when research programs of the Bangkok-based International Board for Soil Re- search and Management (IBSRAM) and IWMI were merged. I R "We are very pleased with the merger," said Frank Rijsberman and Eric Craswell, Directors General of IWMI and the former IBSRAM. "The result is an in- ternational research institute that combines expertise in sustainable water and land resources management with a focus on poverty." IWMI, founded in 1985 as the International Irrigation Management Institute, broadened its scope by moving from irrigation to water management in a river , , basin context. IWMI is headquartered in Colombo, Sri Lanka. With the merger, IB- to Bernard Vanlauwe, IITA, SRAM's former office is now IWMI's new Southeast Asia Regional office in Kaset- Promising Young Scientist sart University in Bangkhen, Bangkok. IBSRAM brings to IWMI 15 years of research expertise in sustainable land man- agement: soil erosion, management of sloping lands and acid soils, nutrient bal- ances of farms on marginal lands, nutrient recycling in urban and peri-urban areas, land management information for farmers, and a training program on land and | water legislation. - ' The merger helps IWMI to enhance its research capacities in land and water management, create innovative programs that foster broad cooperation, and assist A , in building the technical and institutional capacities of national agricultural re- to CIMMYT1 IRRI, and National Agricultural search and extension systems of developing countries. 4 Research Systems of Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan, in the Rice-Wheat Consortium for the Indo-Gangetic Plains, PAGE 14 '4~1 CGIAR NEWS Outstanding Scientific Partnership ~;i| F - J* _ _r-L-i1_3_ Honor Roll Sad News Venkatraman Balaji, Head, Information Systems Unit, ICRISAT, was Ralph W Cummings, one of the founders of the awarded the prestigious World Technology Award for his pioneenng CGIAR, passed away on June 25, 2001, in work in the use of electronic information technologies to better the Raleigh, North Carolina. He served on the fac- lives of villagers. Balaji is the first Indian to receive this award, and ulties of Cornell University and North Carolina joins a stellar cast of awardees including Shawn Fanning (Napster), State University; as Director General of IRRI, Gordon Moore (Intel), and Craig Venter (Celera). ICRISAT, and IIMI (IWMIls predecessor); as Chairman of TAC (1977-1982); and as Chair- Carlos Ochoa, Scientist Emeritus, CIP, was awarded the first William man of the boards of ILCA and ICRAE His L. Brown Award for Excellence in Genetic Resources Conservation multifaceted contributions to international by Genetic Resources Communications Systems (GRCS), publish- agricultural development began in 1957 with ers of Diversity magazine. his appointment as Field Director of the Rock- 1-T ~I Francis Idachaba, Principal Research Scientist, ISNAR, was con- efeller Foundation for India, where he played a ferred the Order of Officer of the Federal Republic (OFR) in the Mil- catalytic role in elevating India's agricultural re- w lennium National Honors List issued by the President of Nigeria. search, extension, and higher education system .____ _ to today's world-class levels. In 1988, he was Pedro A Sanchez, Director General, ICRAF, was awarded an hon- awarded the Presidential End Hunger Award. orary doctorate (honoris causa) by the Catholic University of Leu- ven (KU Leuven), Belgium. The University, one of the oldest insti- John L. Dillon, Emeritus Professor at the Uni- tutions of higher learning in Europe, was founded in 1425 by Pope versity of New England and a long-standing Martinus V In the 16th century, famous scientists such as Erasmus, friend and supporter of the CGIAR, passed I I Vesalius, and Mercator were among its members. away on June 5, 2001, in Armidale, NSW, Aus- tl i tralia. He fought a valiant battle against cancer. John held many important positions at the IPGRI moves to a new home CGIAR, including serving as Chairman of the IPGRI's new headquarters were inaugurated on July 3, 200 CGIAR Committee of Board Chairs (CBC); ]f l IPGRI's new headquarters were inaugurated on July 3, 2001 by Pres- Chairman of the board of the former Interna- ident Carlo Azeglio Ciampi of Italy. The distinguished ceremony in- tional Livestock Research Centre for Africa cluded representatives from the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, (ILCA); and Chairman of the boards of ISNAR, IFAD, FAO, CGIAR, and members of the diplomatic corps. ICRISAT, and ICLARM. In May 2001, with the To mark the inauguration, a new publication "The Mulino at Mac- generous support of the Australian Center for carese" (a grain silo and mill are called mulino in Italian) was re- International Agricultural Research (ACIAR), leased. The area around IPGRI's new headquarters is known as the John L. Dillon Social Science and Aquatic Maccarese and it has a rich agricultural heritage. IPGRI's new head- Resources Economics Laboratory was inaugu- F \ quarters is less than 10 minutes from Rome's Fiumicino airport, and rated at the new headquarters of ICLARM. in close proximity to a few Italian research institutions. John D. Axtell, Lynn Distinguished Professor of IPGRI's new address is: Agronomy at Purdue University and a CGIAR supporter, passed away on December 2, 2000. Via57 deicTresDena 472/aicino)Ro In a career spanning 35 years, he made signifi- 0 a e u o cant contributions in basic research, germplasm J Italy development, graduate education, and scien- Tel: (39) 06 6118.1 tific leadership in plant breeding and genetics. Fax: (39) 06 6197.9661 Many in the CGIAR will remember him for his F 7 t' Email: ipgri@cgiar.org leadership of the International Sorghum and Millet Collaborative Research Program. CIMMYT International Conference on Impacts of Agricultural Research CIMMYT, in partnership with the Standing Panel on Impact Assessment (SPIA) of the CGIAR's Technical Advisory Committee (TAC), is hosting a major international conference-Impacts of Agricultural Research and Development: Why Has Impact Assessment Research Not Made More of a Difference? February 4-7, 2002, in SanJose, Costa Rica. The event is being organized by Prabhu Pingali, director of CIMMYT's economics program. More information and registration details can be obtained at the conference website (www.cimmyt.org/research/economics/impacts) or by t ~ sending an e-mail to impacts@cgiar.org. Please mark your calendars. CGIAR NEWS ; PAGE 15 F £1,, G I A R ! ly: CGIAR Chairman CGIAR-SUPPORTED FUTURE HARVEST CENTERS lan Johnson * International Center for Tropical * International Food Policy Research Agriculture (CIAT) Institute (IFPRI) Cali, Colombia Washington, DC, United States Francisco Reifschneider Phone: (57-2) 4450000 Phone: (1-202) 862-5600 www.ciat.cgiar.org wwwifpri.org Cosponsors * Center for International Forestry * International Institute of Tropical Food and Agriculture Organization of: Research (CIFOR) Agriculture (IITA) the United Nations Bogor, Indonesia Ibadan, Nigeria United Nations Development Programme Phone: (62-251) 622 622 Phone: (234-2) 2412626 www cifor.cgiar.org www.iita.cgiar.org The World Bank * International Center for the Im- * International Livestock Research CGIAR Members provement of Maize and Wheat Institute (ILRI) (CIMMYT) Nairobi, Kenya Countries . Mexico City, Mexico Phone: (254-2) 630743 Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Phone: (52-5) 804 2004 www.cgiar.org/ilri Canada, China, Colombia, Cote d'lvoire, Denmark wwwcimmyt.cgiar.org * International Plant Genetic Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, * International Potato Center (CIP) Resources Institute (IPGRI) Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Korea, Luxem- Lima, Peru Maccarese (Fiumicino) Rome Phone: (51-1) 349-6017 Phone: (39-06) 61181 bourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, www.cpotato.org www.ipgri.cgiar.org Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Portugal, Roma- nia, Russian Federation, South Africa, Spain, Swe- * International Center for Agricultural * International Rice Research Research In the Dry Areas Institute (IRRI) den, Switzerland, Syria, Thailand, Uganda, United (ICARDA) Los Banos, Philippines Kingdom, United States of America Aleppo, Syrian Arab Republic Phone: (63-2) 8450563 Phone: (963-21) 2213433 wwwcgiar.org/irri www.icarda.cgiar.org Foundations d * International Service for National Ford Foundation, Kellogg Foundation, International Center for Living Agricultural Research (ISNAR) Rockefeller Foundation Aquatic Resources Management The Hague, The Netherlands (ICLARM) - The World Fish Center Phone: (31-70) 3496100 Penang, Malaysia wwwcgiar.org/isnar International and Regional Organizations Phone: (60-4) 626-1606 International Water Management African Development Bank, Arab Fund for Eco- www.cgiar.org/iclarm Inte Wa n t nomic and Social Development, Asian Development * International Centre for Research Colombo, Sri Lanka Bank, European Commission, Food and Agriculture in Agroforestry (ICRAF) Phone: (94-1) 867404 Organization of the United Nations, Inter-American Nairobi, Kenya www.cgiar.org/iwmi Phone: (254-2) 524000 Development Bank, International Development Re- ww.icraf.cgiar.org * West Africa Rice Development Association (WARDA) search Centre, International Fund for Agricultural *International Crops ResearchBoa,Ctedvir Development, Opec Fund for International Develop- Phone: (225) 31634514 Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics ment, United Nations Development Programme, f Th www.warda.cgiar.org (ICRISAT) United Nations Environment Programme, The Patancheru, Andhra Pradesh, India World Bank . Phone: (91-40) 3296161 www.icrisat.org PAGE 16 '-& CGIAR NEWS Pnnted on Recycled Paper