| Borlaug Gets the United States' Highest
Honor for Science
Photo: The National Science & Technology
Medals Foundation |
Norman E. Borlaug, former CIMMYT wheat breeder,
1970 Nobel Peace Laureate, and scientist whose work helped spark
the Green Revolution, was awarded the National Medal of Science
by US President George W. Bush at a ceremony in the White House
on 13 February 2006. The award was established in 1959 to recognize
special achievements and outstanding contributions in the sciences.
Borlaug has dedicated more than five decades to ending
world hunger and to boosting agricultural productivity in the developing
world. He has been awarded more than 50 honorary doctorates from
institutions in 18 countries, and has talked to more peasant farmers
and visited more wheat fields than any living person. At 91 he continues
to travel worldwide to promote improved farming. He also supports
CIMMYT as a senior consultant and serves as Distinguished Professor
of International Agriculture at Texas A&M University.
Borlaug grew up on a small farm in Iowa, and attended
a one-room schoolhouse for his first eight grades. He studied plant
pathology at the University of Minnesota and was awarded his doctorate
in 1941. Between 1944 and 1960, Borlaug served as the Rockefeller
Foundation scientist in charge of wheat improvement under the Cooperative
Mexican Agricultural Program. He later acted as a consultant to
Mexico's Ministry of Agriculture, and was assigned to the Inter-American
Food Crop Program as an associate director of the
Rockefeller Foundation.
With the establishment of CIMMYT in Mexico in 1963,
Borlaug assumed leadership of the Wheat Program, a position he held
until his official retirement in 1979. By the mid-1960s, he and
partners took technical components of Mexican wheat technology to
Asia, launching the so-called "Green Revolution." Between
1964 and 1990, wheat production in India rose from 12 to 54 million
tons, while wheat production in Pakistan increased from 4.5 to 14.5
million tons.
In 1988, Borlaug became President of the Sasakawa
Africa Association and a Senior Consultant to Global 2000. During
1990-92, he was a member of the US President's Council of Advisors
for Science and Technology. He also serves on many advisory boards,
including the international juries of the annual World Food Prize,
sponsored by the John T. Ruan Foundation, and the annual Africa
Prize for Leadership for the Sustainable End of Hunger, sponsored
by the Hunger Project.
Other recent honors conferred to Borlaug include the
Danforth Award for Plant Science and the Padma Vibhushan, India’s
second highest national award.
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