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September 2009 Archives

MY BORLAUG EXPERIENCE

Entry: Raquel Guerrero, INIAP

From May 24 to July 14, 2009, I participated in the Norman E. Borlaug International Agricultural Science and Technology Fellows Program. It has been a very good experience both for my professional and personal development. During this program, I had the opportunity to acquire new knowledge which will allow me to go further in my ongoing research on the biological control of cocoa diseases.

My training was focused in the development of formulations of biocontrol agents to control cocoa diseases using spores of a fungus called Trichoderma spp. To reach this goal, my mentor Dr. Bryan A. Bailey taught me the methodology in the Sustainable Perennial Crops Laboratory (SPCL) of the Agricultural Research Service of the USDA.


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Outside of the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (Beltsville, Maryland).

During the eight weeks, I worked learning laboratory techniques to prepare and evaluate formulations of spores of Trichoderma sp. In addition, I met people and researchers who are working in my research field that extended my knowledge and gave me the opportunity to share the situation of cocoa and research in my country.

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Working in the hood in the SPCL (A). Germination of spores (B) and chlamidospores (C) of Trichoderma sp.

I am really grateful to Dr. Norman E. Borlaug, The Norman Borlaug International Agriculture Science and Technology Fellows Program, the United States Department of Agriculture, World Cocoa Foundation, the USDA/Agricultural Research Service, Sustainable Perennial Crops Laboratory and Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agropecuarias (INIAP) for giving me the opportunity to participate in this training program and make contacts. It will allow me to keep on conducting experiments in order to improve the cultivation conditions of cocoa and also to improve the farmers’ way of life in my country.

Regional Leadership, Commitment and Coordination: OECD’s Approach to Addressing Child Labour in West Africa’s Cocoa Sector

Entry: Bill Guyton, World Cocoa Foundation

Yesterday, colleagues at OECD/Club du Sahel posted a new regional cocoa initiative in West Africa (English Version) and (French Version) on their website. For those of you who are not familiar with Club du Sahel, they are an organization founded in 1976 to raise international awareness and support for the many challenges facing the nearly 290 million people living in 17 West African countries. OECD/Club du Sahel aids in the development and implementation of action-oriented policies and investments. What impresses me most about Club du Sahel is their knowledge of West Africa and commitment to work in partnership with local and regional institutions in addressing development and social issues.

Why is OECD/Club du Sahel interested in cocoa and child labour?
West Africa produces more than 70% of the world's cocoa production, and touches over a million and a half small-scale family farms in the region. In their recent report, OECD/Club du Sahel mentions opportunities to look at child labour more in a regional context, and to understand the root causes of this complex problem. Child labour needs to be addressed holistically, within the general context of the future of youth, poverty and economic development. The phenomenon occurs not only in cocoa, but in many agricultural sectors such as pineapple, banana and cotton farming.

A Stakeholder Approach:
Earlier this year, the World Cocoa Foundation, along with several key stakeholders including the International Labor Organization (ILO), UNICEF, USAID, ECOWAS, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Development Cooperation of Belgium, CAOBISCO, the European Cocoa Association, ICI and others were invited by OECD/Club du Sahel to share experiences and ideas on how best to address child labour in West Africa’s cocoa sector. These consultations resulted in a “joint statement” for a positive path forward.

A Path Forward:
The OECD/Club du Sahel is seeking to work with existing partners and programs, building on the good work underway by the governments of Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire to further strengthen efforts through support of regional organizations such as ECOWAS, UEMOA and CILSS. These regional organizations can help address cross-border and migration dimensions of the West Africa cocoa sector and child labour.

The World Cocoa Foundation is pleased to be one of several stakeholders supporting this initiative.

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World Cocoa Foundation Pays Tribute to Norman Borlaug

Entry: Bill Guyton

Yesterday we learned that one of the most important leaders of our time, Dr. Norman E. Borlaug, had passed away. Referred to as the "Father of the Green Revolution", Dr. Borlaug helped to develop high yielding grain varieties, reducing hunger and leading to improved economic prosperity for thousands of small-scale farmers from around the world. He received a Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 in recognition for his contributions.

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Through the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Norman E. Borlaug International Agricultural Science and Technology Fellows Program, his legacy has also helped young cocoa researchers from West Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia to learn more about disease and pest management with leading researchers in the United States. The World Cocoa Foundation is proud to be a partner of this important program. Please see the following blog entries from 2008 and 2009 USDA Cocoa Borlaug Fellows:


Raquel Guerrero, INIAP, Ecuador

James Quiroz, INIAP, Ecuador

Alexis Matute, INIAP, Ecuador

Rhodina Cena, University of Southern Mindanao, the Philippines:

Muhammad Junaid, Hasanuddin University, Indonesia

Rhodina Cena and Muhammad Junaid

Joseph Chuks Anikwe, Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria

Abu Mustapha Dadzie, Cocoa Research Institute of Ghana

Lewis Dobgima Levai, IRAD, Cameroon


Below is an article from the Wall Street Journal which further highlights the career of this extraordinary man.

Norman Borlaug, The Man who Fed the World.

On the day Norman Borlaug was awarded its Peace Prize for 1970, the Nobel Committee observed of the Iowa-born plant scientist that "more than any other single person of this age, he has helped provide bread for a hungry world." The committee might have added that more than any other single person Borlaug showed that nature is no match for human ingenuity in setting the real limits to growth.

Borlaug, who died Saturday at 95, came of age in the Great Depression, the last period of widespread hunger in U.S. history. The Depression was over by the time Borlaug began his famous experiments, funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, with wheat varieties in Mexico in the 1940s. But the specter of global starvation loomed even larger, as advances in medicine and hygiene contributed to population growth without corresponding increases in the means of feeding so many.

Borlaug solved that challenge by developing genetically unique strains of "semidwarf" wheat, and later rice, that raised food yields as much as sixfold. The result was that a country like India was able to feed its own people as its population grew from 500 million in the mid-1960s, when Borlaug's "Green Revolution" began to take effect, to the current 1.16 billion. Today, famines—whether in Zimbabwe, Darfur or North Korea—are politically induced events, not true natural disasters.

In later life, Borlaug was criticized by self-described "greens" whose hostility to technology put them athwart the revolution he had set in motion. Borlaug fired back, warning in these pages that fear-mongering by environmental extremists against synthetic pesticides, inorganic fertilizers and genetically modified foods would again put millions at risk of starvation while damaging the very biodiversity those extremists claimed to protect. In saving so many, Borlaug showed that a genuine green movement doesn't pit man against the Earth, but rather applies human intelligence to exploit the Earth's resources to improve life for everyone.

Jamaica Cocoa

Entry: Bill Guyton and Robert Peck, World Cocoa Foundation

We had the pleasure to meet some very distiguished visitors on Wednesday this week. A delegation from Jamaica, led by Agricultural Minister Tufton, joined USAID and several World Cocoa Foundation company members, met in our offices to discuss ways to revitalize Jamacia's cocao sector. We commend the actions of the Agriculture Ministry and USAID and look forward to helping Jamaican cocoa farmers.

Please see the article below from Radio Jamaica.


USAID to assist local cocoa industry
Thursday, 17 September 2009

Assistance in restructuring Jamaica's cocoa industry is coming from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the World Cocoa Foundation.

This follows meetings between Agriculture Minister Dr. Christopher Tufton and those agencies during his first official trip to Washington D.C. this week.

A team of experts sponsored by USAID is scheduled to be in Jamaica next week to concretise the arrangements.

The experts hail from Agricultural Cooperatives Development International and the Volunteers in Overseas Cooperative Assistance.

The assistance came after Dr. Tufton outlined to the USAID, government initiatives to restructure the cocoa growing sector and reposition it to support economic growth.

"I provided a briefing as to what we are doing. A number of these organizations are already involved with us on a particular project so we used the opportunity to advertise some of those existing relationships and also to secure agreements on new arrangements," Dr. Tufton said.

He said the restructuring would involve divestment of some entities.

Dr. Tufton expects this divestment will help attract the right private sector players to the industry, expanding production capacity to 3,000 tons, yearly.

There are currently 11,000 cocoa farmers producing some 650 tons of cocoa, while there is demand for 1,400 tons.

Dr. Tufton pointed out that if production goals are achieved, the industry would be on the right track as a foreign exchange earner.

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Africa’s Importance to the United States

Entry: Bill Guyton, World Cocoa Foundation

Please see below a Washington Post article written by H.E. Paul Kagame, President of Rwanda, on the importance of Africa to the United States. The messages struck a positive chord with me. It highlights the opportunities for the United States and Africa countries to work in closer partnership in order to bring about sustainable development.


Why the U.S. Needs Africa

Washington Post
By Paul Kagame
Monday, September 21, 2009

Africa and the United States may be on the verge of a new partnership, not one of dependency and aid but one of shared ideas, vision and investments that increase our mutual prosperities. To begin this improved relationship, both must accept urgent and substantial changes in the nature of our bond.

Africa needs to acknowledge a key tenet of President Obama's July address to Ghana's parliament: that a vibrant private sector is critical for capable, reliable and transparent societies. Without a dynamic private sector, no society can prosper. The African continent has been slow to foster conditions that build active private enterprise.

Africa must adopt policies that strengthen governance and promote economic growth to create conditions for a strong and innovative private sector. These are the most durable strategies for advancing socioeconomic transformation.

Like all nations, my country is not perfect, but Rwanda continues to build strong foundations for stability and improve standards of living for all of our people. This has led to greater social integration and gender equity. Rwanda has leveraged the contribution of women for its productivity and prosperity; ours is the only country in the world with women as a majority in parliament.

Rwanda has moved from instability to reconciliation and sustainable development largely through our Vision 2020 strategy. The primary principles of this strategy include macroeconomic stability; wealth creation to reduce dependence; and a shift from an agriculture-based economy toward a knowledge-based economy, with a vibrant service sector. We have enacted and consistently enforce a rule of law that counters corruption and supports our ambitious reform agenda. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton acknowledged our progress, and the importance of "policies based on evidence and measurable results," during an Aug. 5 speech in Kenya. Rwanda's ranking as the top global reformer in the World Bank Doing Business 2010 report illustrates what can be achieved with vision and engagement.

The recommendations in President Obama's July 11 address are as pertinent for the United States as they were for Africa. Africa's prosperity, he said, "can expand America's prosperity. [Its] health and security can contribute to the world's." The link between the U.S. economy and African markets is critical, especially given global economic conditions and the potential Africa represents as a profitable new market.

It is no longer enough for the United States to work for Africa based on pity; the United States must work with Africa to build both our economies and improve the lives of all of our people. The United States has long supported assistance to Africa. The United States must recognize that Africa is now in a position to be of assistance to the United States. It is time to acknowledge our mutual reliance with clear actions. Yes -- Africa must improve its governance institutions and embrace private-sector development. We appreciate the African Growth Opportunity Act and acknowledge that Africa has not fulfilled its potential; African countries should take responsibility for shortfalls in their efforts and take greater advantage of opportunities under this act.

Meanwhile, the United States should increase financing to U.S. companies wishing to do business in Africa through key financial institutions such as Export-Import Bank of the United States and the Overseas Private Investment Corp. The United States has committed less to African markets than the emerging economies of Asia have; China guarantees nearly 30 times more in loans for investment in Africa than the United States does. Africa's needs are so great that there is ample room for both U.S. and Chinese investment. Increased U.S. investment in Africa would translate into more opportunities for U.S. companies, with high potential for profit flowing back to the U.S. economy.

The United States should also support regional initiatives in Africa. Africa's economic development does not stop at national boundaries. Our markets need to be connected by better roads, by canals and ports, and through new technologies. Yet few U.S. companies are competing for large-scale and regional projects.

The development of regional trading pacts similar to the North American Free Trade Agreement is among Africa's highest priorities. Regional development would better allow U.S. products and companies to reach beyond individual countries to greater markets without the burden of tariffs and legislative burdens.

As I meet with President Obama and other world leaders this month at the U.N. General Assembly in New York and the Corporate Council on Africa's U.S.-Africa Business Summit in Washington, I will remind them that development assistance to Africa is important but that the best type of aid leads to investment in national infrastructure and private-sector reinforcement. Without a vibrant private sector, there can be no economic growth or development. If the U.S. private sector played a greater role in Africa, mutual development would follow. To achieve this, the Obama administration must facilitate U.S. investment in Africa, and African leaders must attract greater U.S. investment by consolidating our institutions for effective governance.

The writer is president of the Republic of Rwanda.

Education Experts Discuss Keys to Strengthening African Education/2009 Ron Brown Series

Challenges are Opportunities for Change: Summit on Investing in Education in Africa

Classroom Interactions, Relevance, Nutrition and Health Care Are Among the Keys to Strengthening African Education

Washington, D.C. (September 28, 2009) - U.S. Rep. Diane Watson (D-CA) joined experts from the U.S. Agency for International Development, academia, the non-profit arena, and the private sector last Wednesday to examine how all can work together to build educational opportunities for Africa’s children and young adults.

Present trends indicate that by 2050, more than half the population of most African countries will be younger than 20. Efforts to provide the best possible education for this significant “human capital” cannot wait, speakers agreed. Congresswoman Diane Watson stressed the critical need to focus on young men as they have increasingly become an at-risk group throughout the African Diaspora. There is a concerted need to address the high levels of school dropout rates, levels of violence and other risky behavior among this cohort.

U.S. assistance must complement Africa’s efforts to ensure that students arrive at school well-nourished, healthy, and ready to learn; are taught by trained, motivated teachers; and continue in school until they have useful job skills or qualifications to attend college. Equally important, Africa needs more capacity to train professionals, particularly graduate-level specialists in science, agriculture, engineering, and other technical fields.

The Summit’s featured speakers included:

- Dr. Sarah E. Moten, Chief, Africa Bureau, Office of Sustainable Development, Education Division of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID);
- Dr. Hilary I. Inyang, President, African University of Science and Technology, Abuja, Nigeria;
- Dr. Emmanuel Ojameruaye, Vice-President, Research and Program Development, IFESH (International Foundation for Education and Self-Help); and
- Mr. Charlie Feezel, Education Program Director, World Cocoa Foundation.

The goal of the Summit was to generate a set of necessary strategies targeting both African countries and international donors such as the U.S. on improving education outcomes from the primary to tertiary levels in Africa. A detailed report outlining discussed strategies is forthcoming.

The Summit which was part of the Ronald H. Brown African Affairs Series, was co-sponsored by Leadership Africa USA, the Constituency for Africa and the International Foundation for Education and Self-Help. The 2009 Ron Brown African Affairs Series focused on how Americans of African descent can participate in and support the Obama administration’s foreign policy towards Africa.