
CIMMYT Director General Tom Lumpkin talks
with Mexican Secretary of Agriculture Alberto Cárdenas
Jiménez. |
Latin American ministers visit CIMMYT and develop
food price crisis strategy
Skyrocketing food prices recently brought Latin
American agriculture ministers from 14 countries and development
experts to CIMMYT to seek a way forward for a region characterized
by serious rural poverty.
On 26 May 2008, ministers of agriculture and government
officials from Belize, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico,
Nicaragua, Panama, and Venezuela, as well as representatives of
international organizations working in agricultural development
and the Mexican media—more than 70 persons in all—visited
CIMMYT’s headquarters in Mexico to learn about the center’s
work and discuss collaborative strategies for addressing the food
price crisis. The visit was part of a two-day summit organized by
Mexico’s agriculture (SAGARPA)
and foreign relations (SRE)
ministries, following up on recommendations from a regional summit
on the same topic in Nicaragua earlier this month.
Speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Centers of the
Consultative Group
on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) in his welcoming
talk, CIMMYT Director General Tom Lumpkin emphasized the need to
move from the present emergency to a permanent vision for addressing
the crisis. “It appears that two decades of complacency about
basic food production has finally given way to a sense of urgency,”
Lumpkin said. “We must now transform that urgency into a long-term
vision, making sensible investments in agricultural research and
extension to provide food for our children and our grandchildren.”
Have policy makers forgotten
small-scale farmers?
The
rising cost of food is being felt around the world, especially
by poor people in rural zones. Though often not on the radar screens
of policymakers, the rural poor are numerous. A recent paper from
the International
Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) says there are more than
400 million small farms in developing countries, and that these
are home to most of the world’s hungry and disadvantaged.
In Latin America and the Caribbean, nearly 64% of the rural population
lives below the poverty line, according to a report by the International
Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). Over the last two
decades, the number of poor people in rural areas in the region
has increased in both absolute and relative terms, the report says.
SAGARPA and CIMMYT undertake
new, joint projects
As the meetings closed, Lumpkin urged “…the governments
of Mexico and other countries in the region to re-examine their
relationship with CIMMYT and bring new backing for research to increase
food production and farm productivity.” In the week following
the visit and at the invitation of Mexico’s Secretary of Agriculture,
Alberto Cárdenas Jiménez, the center has submitted
proposals for joint SAGARPA-CIMMYT work to develop, test, and disseminate
drought tolerant maize varieties, as well as management practices
that reduce small-scale farmers’ losses of stored maize grain
to insect pests.
For more information: Rodomiro Ortiz, Director,
Resource Mobilization (r.ortiz@cgiar.org)
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