| International
drive to safeguard world's seed collections
gains momentum by convening first meeting of eminent
experts
World’s Agricultural Heritage Further Threatened
by War, Terrorist Activities,
Economic Hardship, Leaders Say
ROME, ITALY (4 March 2003) – Key leaders in agriculture
announced today their progress in charting a course
forward for an unprecedented effort to protect and maintain
humanity’s agricultural heritage. Crop diversity
collections, housed in some 1,470 “genebanks,”
hold millions of plant samples that are the underpinning
of a stable and sustainable food supply. These samples
are the result of some 10,000 years of planting, plowing,
and breeding of crops for human use.
Many of these collections are seriously underfunded,
jeopardizing the ongoing security of agriculture and
the world’s ability to feed itself. In response,
the Global Crop Diversity Trust seeks to create an endowment
to support crop diversity collections in perpetuity.
Spearheaded by the Future Harvest Centres of the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
and the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO), the Trust convened the first meeting of a newly
constituted Interim Panel of Eminent Experts in development,
agriculture, and science. (See attached list of panel
members.)
The Panel considered legal options and rules of governance
for the Trust and drafted ethical guidelines for the
receipt, management, and disbursement of funds. The
meeting was held in Rome on 25-26 February.
“Crop diversity is a little known necessity for
meeting the most fundamental need of humankind: the
need for food,” said Louise Fresco, Assistant
Director-General of FAO. “I am pleased that this
important effort is moving forward under the guidance
and leadership of such an eminent array of scientists
and statesmen. They will provide the necessary political,
financial, and technical guidance to shape the Trust.”
The Panel also sounded an alarm about the need for governments
and the private sector around the world to take urgent
actions to help protect global crop diversity.
“Funding for crop diversity collections has always
been hand-to-mouth, most often decided on a year-to-year
basis,” said Ambassador Fernando Gerbasi, Chair
of the Interim Panel of Eminent Experts. Ambassador
Gerbasi successfully chaired the inter-governmental
negotiations leading to the creation of the International
Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture.
He now serves as Chair of the Interim Governing Body
of the International Treaty. “The situation is
now even more dire given world economies. An outbreak
of armed conflict anywhere in the world could damage
critical collections of crop diversity, and divert scarce
funding from their maintenance. The world cannot let
the infrastructure that underlies our food security
crumble.”
The Trust seeks to raise an endowment of US$260 million.
Approximately US$25 million has been committed so far
by the governments of the United States, Switzerland,
Egypt and Colombia, and the United Nations and Gatsby
Foundations.
Crop diversity provides the raw material necessary for
farmers and plant breeders to develop reliable, hardier,
more productive, and nutritious food crops. Such crops
are needed to enable agriculture to remain at the forefront
of the fight against poverty and hunger. Farmers and
breeders must constantly bolster crops against pests,
diseases, weeds, drought, poor soils, and other farming
problems by breeding in new characteristics to protect
them. Crop diversity is the pool from which they draw
these traits.
“The Middle East is the center of origin for critical
crops such as wheat, barley, peas, and lentils,”
said Geoffrey Hawtin, Director General of the Rome-based
International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI).
Dr. Hawtin’s appointment as Interim Executive
Secretary of the Global Crop Diversity Trust was confirmed
by the Interim Panel at its meeting last week. “Last
year, Afghanistan’s main genebank was looted.
All countries are interdependent when it comes to agriculture
and when one genebank fails, the loss reverberates around
the world. That genebank, like so many others, probably
contained plant varieties that are already extinct in
the wild and which now may be lost forever.”
The meeting in Rome confirmed the Trust’s critical
role in implementing the International Treaty on Plant
Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. The Treaty,
adopted in November 2001 by consensus of the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s 140-member
nations, is the highest international law that addresses
the conservation and use of plant genetic resources.
“The Global Crop Diversity Trust operates within
the framework of the International Treaty,” said
Gerbasi. “Its principles of transparency and equity
will be the Trust’s guiding principles. At the
same time, the Trust could provide a concrete funding
mechanism to help realize the goals of the Treaty.”
Further information on the Global Crop Diversity Trust
can be found at: http://startwithaseed.org.
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations (FAO) (http://www.fao.org) is one of the largest
specialized agencies in the United Nations system and
the lead agency for agriculture, forestry, fisheries,
and rural development. FAO works to alleviate poverty
and hunger by promoting agricultural development, improved
nutrition, and the pursuit of food security—defined
as the access of all people at all times to the food
they need for an active and healthy life.
The Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research (CGIAR) (http://www.cgiar.org) is an association
of public and private members supporting a system of
16 Future Harvest Centres that work in more than 100
countries to mobilize cutting-edge science to reduce
hunger and poverty, improve human nutrition and health,
and protect the environment.
For further
information, contact:
Ellen Wilson or Preeti Singh at +1 301 652 1558
Nick Parsons, FAO +39 06 5705 3276
For immediate use
Editor’s Note: Supplemental photos are available
at: http://startwithaseed.org/pressalbum/
Interim Panel of Eminent
Experts for the Establishment of the
Global Crop Diversity Trust
Ambassador Fernándo
Gerbasi (Venezuela)
Chair of the Interim Committee for the implementation
of the International Treaty Chair, Interim Panel of
Eminent Experts, the Global Crop Diversity Trust
Lukas Brader (the Netherlands)
Former Director General, International Institute of
Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Nigeria
Tewolde Gebre Egziabher
(Ethiopia)
General Manager, Environmental Protection Authority,
Ethiopia
Walter Fust (Switzerland)
Director General, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Geoffrey C. Hawtin (UK/Canada)
Director General, International Plant Genetic Resources
Institute (IPGRI), Rome
Interim Executive Secretary, the Global Crop Diversity Trust
Chebet Maikut (Uganda)
President, Uganda National Farmers Federation (UNFFE)
Chair, International Federation of Agricultural Producers
(IFAP) Committee on
Science and Technology
Mohammad H. Roozitalab (Iran)
Deputy Director General, Agricultural Research and Education
Organization, Iran
Setijati Sastrapradja (Indonesia)
Senior Scientist, Indonesian Institute of Sciences
Ismail Serageldin (Egypt)
Director, New Library of Alexandria, Egypt
Former Chair, Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research (CGIAR)
Sir Richard Sykes (UK)
Rector of Imperial College, London
Former CEO, GlaxoSmithKline
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