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funder_partner: Mexico's National Agriculture Council (CNA)

Inspired by ‘enemy of world hunger’ Rajaram, national and global institutions and research centers strengthen their commitment to food security

Representatives of the Government of Mexico, the Embassy of India, the National Agricultural Council, the CGIAR and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) at the Sanjaya Rajaram Experimental Station in Toluca, State of Mexico. (Photo: Alfonso Arredondo Cortés/CIMMYT)
Representatives of the Government of Mexico, the Embassy of India, the National Agricultural Council, the CGIAR and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) at the Sanjaya Rajaram Experimental Station in Toluca, State of Mexico. (Photo: Alfonso Cortés Arredondo/CIMMYT)

Collaboration between food security institutions and research organizations has contributed to improvements in global grain production that have benefitted millions of farmers around the world – and must continue today. This message was highlighted during a ceremony hosted by the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) to recognize the legacy of World Food Laureate and former CIMMYT Wheat Program Director Sanjaya Rajaram.

The ceremony, held at the CIMMYT Experimental Station in Toluca, State of Mexico, officially dedicated the Station in honor of Sanjaya Rajaram, honoring his memory as an “enemy of world hunger” and one of the scientists who has most contributed to global food security.

The Indian-born naturalized Mexican researcher, who was the third person from CIMMYT to receive the World Food Prize, was recognized for having developed more than 480 high-yielding and adaptable wheat varieties that have been planted on approximately 58 million hectares around the world.

“For this impressive achievement, which seems easy to summarize in one sentence, Raj became a giant of the ‘right to food’ and one of the fiercest enemies of hunger in the world,” said CIMMYT Director General Bram Govaerts.

“Building on the work of Dr. Norman Borlaug, Dr. Sanjaya Rajaram was a driving force in making CIMMYT into the extraordinary institution that it is today,” said Claudia Sadoff, Managing Director, Research Delivery and Impact of CGIAR, a global research partnership of which CIMMYT is a member.

“The challenges of today compel us to redouble our efforts to breed more resilient and more nutritious crops, as Dr. Sanjaya Rajaram did, Sadoff added. “This ceremony reminds us that Dr Rajaram’s legacy and the ongoing efforts of CIMMYT and CGIAR scientists must answer that.”

Awards for international cooperation in food security

At the event, CIMMYT presented awards to the Secretary of Foreign Affairs of Mexico, Marcelo Ebrard Casaubón, and of Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development (SADER), Víctor Villalobos Arámbula, for their promotion of food security and social inclusion in Mexico and Latin America.

The Secretary of Foreign Affairs of Mexico expressed his gratitude for the Norman E. Borlaug and reaffirmed his commitment to “work in the international arena as we have done, but now we will have to work harder, with greater intensity.”

Bram Govaerts, Director General of CIMMYT, presents the Norman E. Borlaug award to Marcelo Ebrard Casaubón, Secretary of Foreign Affairs of Mexico. (Photo: Alfonso Arredondo Cortés/CIMMYT)
Bram Govaerts, Director General of CIMMYT, presents the Norman E. Borlaug award to Marcelo Ebrard Casaubón, Secretary of Foreign Affairs of Mexico. (Photo: Alfonso Cortés Arredondo/CIMMYT)

The Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development of Mexico, Víctor Villalobos Arámbula, emphasized that Mexico, Latin America and CIMMYT play an important role in the struggle to improve the conditions of small-scale farmers and the resilience of agri-food systems, noting that more than 300,000 farmers grow maize, wheat and associated crops on over one million hectares in Mexico using sustainable technologies from the CIMMYT-led MasAgro project, now called Crops for Mexico.

“Throughout this administration,” he said, “we have designed, implemented and refined, through collaboration between SADER and CIMMYT, sustainable development strategies with a systemic approach that facilitates the participation of producers in more integrated and efficient value chains both in Mexico and in other countries.”

India’s Ambassador to Mexico, Pankaj Sharma, highlighted that his nation owes a large part of its Green Revolution to the “Sonora” wheat variety, which was developed in Mexico, a country that is considered one of the cradles of agriculture at a global level, with arable land accounting for 15 percent of the total land dedicated to agriculture in the world.

Ravi Singh, Distinguished Scientist and Head of Global Wheat Breeding at CIMMYT, receives an award. (Photo: Alfonso Arredondo Cortés/CIMMYT)
Ravi Singh, Distinguished Scientist and Head of Global Wheat Breeding at CIMMYT, receives an award. (Photo: Alfonso Cortés Arredondo/CIMMYT)

Report on the results of the Crops for Mexico initiative

CIMMYT’s Wheat Germplasm Bank Curator and Genotyping Specialist Carolina Sansaloni presented highlighted impacts from Crops for Mexico, the main cooperative project between the Government of Mexico — through the Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development — and CIMMYT, and a flagship initiative in the application of technologies in sustainable agriculture.

The project has been in operation for more than a decade in 28 states in Mexico, with the collaboration of more than 100 national and international partners and private and public sector agencies in 12 regions, offering research infrastructure and training development for sustainable agronomic practices, she explained.

She reported that the results of 40 platforms, 500 demonstration modules and two thousand extension areas have an impact on more than one million hectares and benefit 300,000 maize, wheat and bean producers, with the use of high-yield varieties.

Rosalinda Muñoz Tafolla, a maize farmer in Amacuzac, in the Mexican state of Morelos, explained that her drive to produce healthy food led her to participate in Crops for Mexico, where CIMMYT’s support and advice has enabled her to dramatically increase her farm’s productivity while protecting the soil and conserving natural resources.

She explained that with the conservation agriculture system she learned to improve soil conditions, planted a new maize variety, and was supported in marketing her harvest at a good price and selling 2,000 maize ears (mostly weighing 200 grams each).

CIMMYT’s Wheat Germplasm Bank Curator and Genotyping Specialist Carolina Sansaloni at the Crops for Mexico presentation. (Photo: Alfonso Arredondo Cortés/CIMMYT)
CIMMYT’s Wheat Germplasm Bank Curator and Genotyping Specialist Carolina Sansaloni at the Crops for Mexico presentation. (Photo: Alfonso Cortés Arredondo/CIMMYT)

World-class laboratories and research fields to the service of Mexico and the world

CIMMYT senior scientist and cropping systems agronomist Nele Verhulst (left) shows the benefits of conservation agriculture to visitors at CIMMYT’s experimental station in Texcoco, Mexico. (Photo: Francisco Alarcón/CIMMYT)
CIMMYT senior scientist and cropping systems agronomist Nele Verhulst (left) shows the benefits of conservation agriculture to visitors at CIMMYT’s experimental station in Texcoco, Mexico. (Photo: Francisco Alarcón/CIMMYT)

High-level representatives of the Carlos Slim Foundation and Mexico’s National Agriculture Council (CNA) visited the global headquarters of the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) outside Mexico City on October 18, 2021, to learn about innovative research to promote sustainable production systems in Mexico and the world.

Carlos Slim Foundation and CNA representatives agreed that public and private sectors, civil society and international research organizations like CIMMYT must collaborate to address the challenges related to climate change, forced migration and rural insecurity.

“It is necessary to give more visibility to and make use of CIMMYT’s world-class laboratories and research fields, to enhance their impact on sustainable development and the 2030 agenda,” said Juan Cortina Gallardo, president of the CNA.

The tour included a visit to CIMMYT’s germplasm bank, where the world’s largest collections of maize and wheat biodiversity are conserved. Visitors also toured the laboratories, greenhouses and experimental fields where cutting-edge science is applied to improve yield potential, adaptability to climate change, resistance to pests and diseases, and nutritional and processing quality of maize and wheat.

Representatives of the Carlos Slim Foundation and Mexico's National Agriculture Council (CNA) stand for a group photo with CIMMYT representatives at the organization’s global headquarters in Texcoco, Mexico. (Photo: Francisco Alarcón/CIMMYT)
Representatives of the Carlos Slim Foundation and Mexico’s National Agriculture Council (CNA) stand for a group photo with CIMMYT representatives at the organization’s global headquarters in Texcoco, Mexico. (Photo: Francisco Alarcón/CIMMYT)

From Mexico to the world

“CIMMYT implements Crops for Mexico, a research and capacity building project building on the successes and lessons learned from MasAgro, where smallholder farmers increase their productivity to expand their market opportunities and can, for example, join the supply chain of large companies as providers and contribute to social development of Mexican farming,” Cortina Gallardo said.

CIMMYT carries out more than 150 integrated development projects related to maize and wheat systems in 50 countries. They are all supported by first-class research infrastructure in CIMMYT’s global headquarters, funded by the Carlos Slim Foundation.

“Our goal is to put CIMMYT’s laboratories, greenhouses and experimental fields at the service of farmers and both public and private sectors as needed,” said Bram Govaerts, director general of CIMMYT. “Accelerating the development of sustainable agricultural practices and more nutritious and resilient varieties contributes to transforming agricultural systems around the world, strengthening global food security and reducing the impact of agriculture on climate change.”

50-year anniversary of Norman Borlaug’s Nobel Peace Prize

In 1970, Norman Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his important scientific work that saved millions of people from famine. Today, humanity faces an equally complex challenge which requires the commitment of all nations, leaders, investors and strategic partners: avoiding the next food crisis.

The Government of Mexico, the Nobel Peace Center and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) will celebrate the 50th anniversary of Borlaug’s Nobel Prize with a call to action to develop a transformational response of agriculture for peace, with an emphasis on nutrition, environment and equity.

Join us on December 8, 2020, from 9:00 to 10:30 a.m. (CST, GMT-6).

Please register in advance.

This special event is part of the run-up to the United Nations Summit of Agrifood Systems of 2021. It will feature international experts in each of the five action tracks of the summit: ensure access to safe and nutritious food for all; shift to sustainable consumption patterns; boost nature-positive production; advance equitable livelihoods; and build resilience to vulnerabilities, shocks and stress.

Guest speakers will include:

  • Marcelo Ebrard Casaubón – Mexico’s Secretary of Foreign Affairs
  • Kjersti Fløgstad – Executive Director, Nobel Peace Center
  • Victor Villalobos – Mexico’s Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development
  • Martin Kropff – Director General, CIMMYT
  • Margaret Bath – Member of CIMMYT’s Board of Trustees
  • Alison Bentley – Director of CIMMYT’s Global Wheat Program
  • Robert Bertram – Chief Scientist, USAID’s Bureau for Resilience and Food Security
  • Nicole Birrell – Chair of CIMMYT’s Board of Trustees
  • Julie Borlaug – President of the Borlaug Foundation
  • Gina Casar – Assistant Secretary-General of the World Food Programme
  • Martha Delgado – Mexico’s Deputy Secretary for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights
  • Marco Ferroni – Chair, CGIAR System Board
  • Federico González Celaya – President of Mexico’s Food Banks Association
  • Bram Govaerts – Deputy Director General for Research and Collaborations a.i. and Director of the Integrated Development Program, CIMMYT
  • Juana Hernández – Producer from the community of San Miguel, in Ocosingo, Chiapas, Mexico
  • Rut Krüger Giverin – Norwegian Ambassador to Mexico
  • Sylvanus Odjo – Postharvest Specialist, CIMMYT
  • Lina Pohl – FAO’s Mexico Representative
  • B.M. Prasanna – Director of CIMMYT’s Global Maize Program and the CGIAR Research Program on Maize
  • Tatiana Ramos – Executive Director, Conservation International Mexico
  • Alfonso Romo – Private Sector Liaison, Government of Mexico
  • Bosco de la Vega – President Mexico’s National Farmer’s Agricultural Council (CNA)

Winners of third Cargill-CIMMYT Award increase food production in Mexico

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

EL BATAN, MEXICO – Cargill Mexico and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) announced the winners of the third Cargill-CIMMYT Food Security and Sustainability Award on July 24. The award ceremony took place at CIMMYT’s global headquarters in México.

The Cargill-CIMMYT Award supports initiatives that tackle food security challenges in Mexico through long-term solutions. Winners have successfully increased the production of nutrient-rich food and made it available to people.

This year, the jury selected the most innovative projects in three categories:

  • Farmers: Carlos Barragán, for the project ‘De la milpa a tu plato’ (‘From the field to your plate’). Based in the state of Oaxaca, this initiative promotes food security and sustainability in small-scale farming systems.
  • Opinion Leaders: Fundación Mexicana para el Desarrollo Rural, for the project Educampo. This project supports poor maize smallholders who live in marginalized communities to make their farming more productive and profitable.
  • Researchers: Mario López, for the project ‘Technology for bean production.’ This initiative incremented production from 2 to 9 tons per hectare, disseminated agricultural technologies and increased the use of improved seed.

Winners were awarded a total of $25,000. The Farmers and Researchers categories received $10,000 each and the Opinion Leaders category was supported with $5,000.

A panel of experts from the agricultural and food sectors selected the winners from a shortlist of 30 projects across the country. The jury included representatives from Cargill Mexico, CIMMYT, Grupo Bimbo, the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture, Mexico’s Agriculture Council and Mexico’s Secretariat of Agriculture, Livestock, Rural Development, Fisheries and Food.


About Cargill

Cargill’s 155,000 employees across 70 countries work relentlessly to achieve our purpose of nourishing the world in a safe, responsible and sustainable way. Every day, we connect farmers with markets, customers with ingredients, and people and animals with the food they need to thrive.

We combine 153 years of experience with new technologies and insights to serve as a trusted partner for food, agriculture, financial and industrial customers in more than 125 countries. Side-by-side, we are building a stronger, sustainable future for agriculture. For more information, visit Cargill.com and our News Center.

About Cargill Mexico

Cargill Mexico aims to contribute in improving agricultural productivity, satisfying and fulfilling the expectations of the domestic industry. In addition to adding value to human and animal nutrition and thus encourage economic development, Cargill Mexico reinvests its profits in several new businesses in the country. Cargill has 9 business units that have operations in Mexico, it employs more than 1,750 people in 13 states and has a total of 30 facilities, including a corporate office in Mexico City. For more information, visit Cargill.com.mx, and our News Center.

About CIMMYT

The International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) is the global leader in publicly-funded maize and wheat research and related farming systems. Headquartered near Mexico City, CIMMYT works with hundreds of partners throughout the developing world to sustainably increase the productivity of maize and wheat cropping systems, thus improving global food security and reducing poverty. CIMMYT is a member of the CGIAR System and leads the CGIAR Research Programs on Maize and Wheat and the Excellence in Breeding Platform. The Center receives support from national governments, foundations, development banks and other public and private agencies. For more information, visit staging.cimmyt.org.


For more information

Cargill Mexico: Joselyn Ortega, Joselyn_Ortega@cargill.com, +52 5511057429.

CIMMYT: Ricardo Curiel, R.Curiel@cgiar.org, +52 5558047544.


Photos available (click on the image to download the high-resolution JPG file)

Carlos Barragán (center) receives the Cargill-CIMMYT Award, in the Farmers category. Behind him are representatives from the organizations in the jury (from left to right): Bosco de la Vega, President of Mexico’s National Agriculture Council; David Hernández, Global Chief Procurement Officer of Grupo Bimbo; Martin Kropff, Director General of CIMMYT; Jorge Zertuche, Mexico’s Undersecretary of Agriculture; Marcelo Martins, President of Cargill Mexico; and José Sáenz, Chief of Staff to the Secretary of Economy. (Photo: CIMMYT)
Carlos Barragán (center) receives the Cargill-CIMMYT Award, in the Farmers category.
Behind him are representatives from the organizations in the jury (from left to right): Bosco de la Vega, President of Mexico’s National Agriculture Council; David Hernández, Global Chief Procurement Officer of Grupo Bimbo; Martin Kropff, Director General of CIMMYT; Jorge Zertuche, Mexico’s Undersecretary of Agriculture; Marcelo Martins, President of Cargill Mexico; and José Sáenz, Chief of Staff to the Secretary of Economy. (Photo: CIMMYT)
From left to right: Marcelo Martins, President of Cargill Mexico; Carlos Barragán, Farmers category winner; Citlali Fuentes, from Fundación Mexicana para el Desarrollo Rural, Opinion Leaders category winner; Mario López, Researchers category winner; and Martin Kropff, Director General of CIMMYT. (Photo: CIMMYT)
From left to right: Marcelo Martins, President of Cargill Mexico; Carlos Barragán, Farmers category winner; Citlali Fuentes, from Fundación Mexicana para el Desarrollo Rural, Opinion Leaders category winner; Mario López, Researchers category winner; and Martin Kropff, Director General of CIMMYT. (Photo: CIMMYT)

40th Anniversary Celebration of the CGIAR – Program

 Preston Auditorium, Wednesday, July 6, 2011, 9:15 a.m.
DRAFT AGENDA

Participants:

The Preston Auditorium is expected to be filled.  The audience will include CGIAR Consortium and Fund Council representatives, Directors General of Centers, agricultural research partners, IFPRI Center staff, past CGIAR chairs, World Bank staff, and other external guests.  In addition, the event will be webcast for the benefit of staff at all CGIAR Centers and other partners.

Mr. Zoellick, Ms. Andersen, Mr. Shah, and Mr. Castañeda, will be on stage in the Preston Auditorium, with the podium stage right. A backdrop will feature an image of the 40th anniversary of CGIAR.

Overall Objectives:

  • To celebrate CGIAR’s tremendous achievements in agricultural research over the past 40 years
  • To showcase, through the launch of a CGIAR Research Program (CRP), how the CGIAR has repositioned itself to continue to address emerging challenges for the next 40 years
  • To reiterate the World Bank’s and other donors’/partners’ support to the CGIAR in its drive to enhance food security

 

 

9:15 a.m. Roger V. Morier – Call to order and introduces Inger
9:15 a.m. Inger Andersen: Welcome remarks

  • Introduction of other platform personnel and introduction of each as they speak
  • Introduction of the short video preceding Mr. Zoellick’s remarks.
9:20 a.m. Video Presentation – The Story of the Start of the CGIAR, as told by Norman Borlaug and Robert McNamara
9:30 a.m. Inger Andersen: Invitation to Mr. Zoellick to make remarks (approximately 10 minutes)

  • Focus on state of food security, role of WB and challenge to CG
9:40 a.m. Rajiv Shah, Administrator, USAID invited to make remarks (TBC)

  • On behalf of developed country partners of the CG
  • USAID’s efforts re: food security
9:50 a.m. Mariano Ruiz-Funes, Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, Mexico, invited to make brief remarks

  • On behalf of the developing country partners of the CGIAR
  • Mexico’s commitment to combating food insecurity
9:55 a.m. Presentation by the CGIAR Fund Office to Mr. Zoellick, Mr. Shah, and Mr. Castañeda of a book produced for the 40th anniversary of the CGIAR
10:00 a.m. Mr. Zoellick’s departure from Preston Auditorium. Platform personnel change
Launch of MAIZE CRP
10:05 a.m. Introductory remarks by Inger Andersen, Chair, Fund Council

  • Will emphasize the role and responsibility of donors in new compact
10:15 a.m. Remarks by Carlos Perez del Castillo, Board Chair, Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers

  • Introduction of other platform personnel and introduction of each as they speak
  • Introduction of the exciting new CGIAR Research Program portfolio and makes the link to MAIZE
10:25 a.m. Video: African farmer and Asian farmer

  • Will emphasize perspective of farmers in developing countries in regard to food security issues
  • A view from the ground
10:35 a.m. Remarks by Ephraim Mukisira, Director, KARI

  • Will emphasize the need for cooperation to address complex challenges of food security
  • No one organization can do it alone
10:45 a.m. Launch of MAIZE Program, Tom Lumpkin, DG, CIMMYT

  • Will explain the composition of the plan including how it was developed, how it will be managed, and what the overall goals are
  • Will emphasize the need for cooperation and commitment over a long period of time
  • Will emphasize the immense challenge – but we can address it if we act now
10:55 a.m. Closing Remarks by Jonathan Wadsworth, Executive Secretary, Fund Council and Head of Fund Office