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International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center

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Title: International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center


1
International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
CIMMYT
www.cImmyt.org
2
International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
3
  • More than one out of four people on earth are
    poor.
  • One out of seven are hungry.
  • The vast majority of these people live in
    developing countries.
  • CIMMYT works for them.

4
  • CIMMYT conducts research on maize and wheat to
    help people overcome hunger and poverty and to
    grow crops without harming the environment.

5
  • CIMMYTs mission is to alleviate poverty by
    increasing the profitability, productivity, and
    sustainability of maize- and wheat-based farming
    systems.

6
CIMMYTs goal is to improve the lives of poor
people
C
  • ending their hunger,
  • raising their incomes,
  • preserving their land, water, and other natural
    resources, and
  • helping their children to a better life.

7
Why is CIMMYTs Work Important?
W
  • The world has not solved the problems of hunger
    and poverty.
  • Globally, we produce enough food for everyone.
  • Locally, people are starving and malnourished.
    They lack resources to grow or buy enough food.

8
Facts about Population, Poverty, and Hunger
F
  • The world will gain 2 billion people in the next
    25 years, and 97 of them will be born in
    developing countries
  • Nearly half of the worlds people (2.8 billion)
    rely on less than US 2 per day to meet all their
    needsfor food, shelter, clothing, health, and
    education
  • Half of all children in the poorest countries are
    still malnourished

Source World Bank (2000).
9
Maize and Wheat Important forPoor People
M
  • Seventy percent of the worlds people live in
    rural areas and depend on agriculture for food
    and income
  • Maize and wheat are among the three most
    important basic foods in low-income nations (the
    other one is rice)
  • Maize and wheat provide, on average, 25 of all
    food calories consumed in low-income nations
  • Maize and wheat are essential to food security of
    many low-income nations, and many poor households
  • Poor people in developing countries spend 50-80
    of their disposable income on food compared to
    the 10-15 spent in Europe and the US

10
Rising Demand for Maize and Wheat
R
  • By 2020, the worlds farmers will have to produce
    40 more grain to meet demand for cereals,
    including wheat and maize
  • By 2020, 67 of the worlds wheat consumption and
    57 of the worlds maize consumption will occur
    in developing countries
  • In developing countries, demand for wheat and
    maize will rise faster than demand for rice
  • Demand for wheat will grow by 1.58 per year
    demand for maize will grow by 2.35 per year

Source Pinstrup-Andersen, Pandya-Lorch,
and Rosegrant (1999) Rosegrant et al. (1997).
11
Developing CountriesImporting More Maize and
Wheat
D
  • By 2020 wheat will constitute more than 50 of
    the developing worlds net cereal imports
  • Maize will constitute 33
  •  
  • But Will Imports Solve the Hunger Problem?
  •  
  • Many developing nations cannot generate enough
    foreign exchange to buy the grain they need
  • Demand is unlikely to be met through global trade
  • Since 1960, the share of world grain consumption
    that is traded has remained constant at about 10

Source Rosegrant et al. (1997) McCalla (2000).
12
Natural Resources for Agriculture In Jeopardy?
N
  • The world has 8.7 billion hectares of
    agricultural lands, pastures, forest, and
    woodlands 25 of this area has been degraded in
    the past 50 years, and each year another 5 to 10
    million hectares suffer the same fate
  • The 70 of the worlds freshwater that goes to
    agriculture is a dwindling resource
  • Even if irrigated agriculture becomes more
    efficient, the world will need at least 17 more
    freshwater to meet food needs
  • Increased ozone pollution, acid rain, and global
    warming also threaten the future productivity of
    agriculture

Source Shah and Strong (1999).
13
CIMMYT Origins and Early Impacts
C
  • Mexico and the Rockefeller Foundation began a
    specialized research program on maize, wheat, and
    other crops in 1943
  • CIMMYTfounded in 1966traces its origins to that
    program
  • Success in developing high-yielding, semidwarf
    wheats enabled a quick response in the mid-1960s
    to the threat of famine in South Asia
  • Millions of farmers across South Asia adopted
    those wheats, creating the Green Revolution
  • Norman Borlaug, an early leader and continuing
    inspiration in CIMMYTs wheat research, was
    awarded the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for developing
    those life-saving wheats

Norman Borlaug Receives Nobel Peace Prize
14
Our Partners
  • CIMMYT works in close partnership with
  • National public agricultural research systems
    throughout the developing world
  • Other centers of the Consultative Group on
    International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
  • Advanced research institutes (ARIs)
  • Non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
  • Farmers
  • Private organizations

15
Our Products and Services
  • Efficient maize and wheat varieties, with
    built-in genetic resistance to important
    diseases, insects, and other selected stresses
  • Conservation and utilization of maize and wheat
    genetic resources from throughout the world
  • Development of more sustainable maize and wheat
    production systems

16
Our Products and Services
  • Strategic research on conserving natural
    resources, economics, biotechnology, crop
    physiology, and ecosystem management
  • More efficient research methods
  • New scientific knowledge and information
  • Introductory, intermediate, and advanced training
  • Technical consultation with a wide range of
    collaborators

17
Funding
F
  • Many governments and organizations, including
    foundations and private organizations, help
    CIMMYT researchers fulfill their mission

Foundations (CGIAR members) 2
Foundations (Non-CGIAR members) 5
CGIAR members (South) 5
Non-CGIAR members (South) 2
Advanced research institute agreements (Private)
3
Advanced research institute agreements (Public) 4
Investors in CIMMYT
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