Innovations for Global Food Security: Advancing Legume Productivity and USAID s Feed the Future Program

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Innovations for Global Food Security: Advancing Legume Productivity and USAID s Feed the Future Program J. Vern Long, PhD USAID Bureau for Food Security Nov 3, 2014

Outline Feed the Future background Agricultural research and capacity development investments under Feed the Future Opportunities for faculty, students, and administrators

The Global Challenge: Achieving Sustainable Food Security 925 million people suffer from chronic hunger. Demand for food is projected to increase by 50 percent over the next 20 years. Increased demand will come primarily from population and income growth in middle-income countries. Diversified diets increasingly in demand especially animal source foods.

Global Food Prices Source: FAO

Our Response Feed the Future Announced in 2009 at G-8 Summit in L Aquila, Italy, with $3.5 B investment Reduce poverty and undernutrition Country-led Staples-led growth Photo: Borlaug Foundation Dietary quality: legumes, animal source foods, horticulture Emphasis on S&T

Why Agriculture? GDP growth originating in agriculture is at least twice as effective in reducing poverty as GDP growth originating outside agriculture.

What Does Feed the Future Do? 1. Help farmers produce more 2. Help farmers get more food to market 3. Support Research & Development to improve smallholder agriculture in a changing climate 4. Strengthen Regional Trade 5. Create a better Policy Environment 6. Improve Access to Nutritious Food and Nutrition Services

FTF invests $1 Billion/yr Bilateral Funding: through USAID Missions Country investment plans prioritize donor funds Value chain programs integrated with nutrition and resiliency Direct gov-to-gov engagement (e.g. policy, institutional reform, etc.) Central Funding: Washington-based programs ~10% for R&D to contribute to broader development agenda

Overarching Goal: Sustainable Intensification Three research themes: Advancing the productivity frontier Transforming key production systems Improving nutrition and food safety Anchored by key geographies: Indo-gangetic plains in South Asia Sudano-sahelien systems in West Africa Maize and livestock mixed systems in East and Southern Africa Ethiopian highlands FTF Research Strategy

USAID s Implementation of Feed the Future Research Strategy Food Security Innovation Center Climate Resilient Cereals Productive Legumes Advanced approaches to animal and plant pests & disease Sustainable Intensification Nutritious & Safe Foods Policy Human & Institutional Capacity Development

Why Focus on Legumes? Poverty Reduction Increase cereal productivity and profitability (through N-fixing ability) Good source of income, esp. women Improved Human Nutrition Excellent sources of macro and micronutrients Environmental benefits Critical crop for sustainably intensified production systems N-fixing ability Multi-purpose crops for people and farm animals

The humble legume helps farmers fields flourish and their pocket books too!

Program for Research on Legume Productivity Challenge: Increase productivity and availability of legumes Abiotic stresses decrease legume yields by up to 40% Pests and diseases can decrease yields by up to 35% The grain legume value chain directly benefits women, especially in Africa Solutions: Elevate legumes as major investment area under the research strategy Tackle yield, climate resilience and biotic stresses for staple legumes Utilize private sector knowledge and skill in transgenic and emerging genomic tools Example Projects: Grain Legumes Innovation Lab Peanut & Mycotoxins Innovation Lab Climate Resilient Cowpea Innovation Lab CGIAR Grain Legumes CRP

Productive Legumes Investments Legume (Michigan State with UCR) Peanut & Mycotoxin (University of Georgia) Climate Resilient Cowpea (UCR) Climate Resilient Beans (Penn State) Climate Resilient Chickpea (UC Davis) Soy Value Chain Research (U. Illinois) Bt Cowpea (AATF) CGIAR Research Program for Grain Legumes

Where we work Innovation Labs Advancing Legume Productivity Cowpea Chickpea Soy Peanut (+ Haiti) Common Bean (+ Central America)

New black bean varieties grown by >50,000 households Program: Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Collaborative Research on Grain Legumes University lead: Michigan State University Core research for 10+ years on variety development Focus on Central American highlands Beans contribute to nutrition and income gains Scale up effort Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Haiti Community seed systems get varieties to farmers >50,000 households received seed Quiche Hunapu variety

Cowpeas for West Africa Cowpea dishes in Burkina Faso Mono-cropped & Intercropped

How do we do this work? UC Riverside faculty Collaborate with researchers in West Africa To develop cowpea varieties grown by these farmers Drs. Roberts & Close Dr. Issa Drabo Burkina Faso To consume & sell in the market

Importance of US capacity IL model requires US capacity in key fields Dual benefit - US and partner countries Global conversation on plant breeding capacity gaps public and private sector Cereals have stronger private sector support legumes research needs a strong public sector base Feeding 9 billion people requires R&D R&D requires PEOPLE!

Indicative Assessment of Required Agricultural Postgraduates in Selected Developing Countries Country Actual Number of Postgraduates in Developing Countries Postgraduates needed in developing countries today to match the number in developed countries in the 1960/70s (farm based) Postgraduates needed in developing countries today to match the number in developed countries in the 1960/70s (area based) Africa Uganda 89 1287 264 Burkina Faso 36 669 219 Congo, Dem. Rep 138 3381 488 Ethiopia 205 4598 673 Tanzania 114 2922 858 Zambia 30 393 755 Asia India 2083 79998 3877 Cambodia 13 302 114 Source: Estimates by Suresh Babu and Joachim von Braun, Global Open Food and Agriculture University preparatory papers, IFPRI, 2006. Table reproduced from Asenso-Okyere and von Braun, 2009.

For Students and Faculty: Needed Skills and Experience Soft skills beyond core research training Budgeting, communications, management, team work, leadership, working across disciplines, entrepreneurial orientation Build experience GO ABROAD!

Opportunities for Funding & Engagement Business forecast: http://www.usaid.gov/workusaid/get-grant-or-contract/business-forecast Contracts: https://www.fbo.gov/ Grants: www.grants.gov E-Training modules on partnering with USAID on www.usaid.gov Higher Education APS, senior adviser on higher ed Virtual internships (US Dept of State/USAID) http://www.state.gov/vsfs/

Opportunities International Agricultural Research Collaboration Upcoming RFPs from Sustainable Intensification (K-State) and IPM Innovation Labs (Virginia Tech) (faculty) NSF s PEER program (PEER Science and PEER Health) www.nationalacademies.org/peer Research and Innovation Fellowships (NSF GRFP eligible) http://www.usaid.gov/rifellowships LINKAGES program with CGIAR (faculty) http://feedthefuture.gov/sites/default/files/resource/files/ftf_guidance_cg iar_universities_link_program.pdf US Global Food Security Fellows Program (for American graduate students) and Summer Institute http://www.purdue.edu/discoverypark/food/borlaugfellows/ Deadline ~ March every year

Capacity Development Farmer-to-Farmer volunteers http://www.usaid.gov/what-we-do/agriculture-and-foodsecurity/supporting-agricultural-capacity-development/john-ogonowski Borlaug Leadership Enhancement in Agriculture Program (students and mentors) http://borlaugleap.org/ Borlaug Higher Education for Agricultural Research and Development (students and mentors) http://bheard.isp.msu.edu/

Advisory and Unfunded Engagement Webcasts, Streaming, and Online Discussions Discuss the high-level and programmatic strategies in a public venue accessible to potential partners everywhere International Development Community and Resources Training and Resources for Professional/Curriculum Use Communities of Practice (e.g., AgriLinks) Crowdsourcing and Data Public Meetings Board for International Food and Agriculture Development Advisory Committee on Voluntary and Foreign Aid

We will drive the growth of the future that lifts all of us up. President Barack Obama, 2009 Thank You! jlong@usaid.gov www.feedthefuture.gov