Conference speakers and exhibitors will present
strategies and results that respond directly to the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) outlined by the United Nations, and have a marked impact on the
lives and livelihoods of smallholder producers and consumers of developing
countries.
Considerable
progress has been made towards those goals, but much is yet to be done. Despite
significant economic growth in many developing countries over the past decade,
over 800 million people remain under-nourished, including 160 million children.
According
to recent Lancet reports, under-nutrition remains the underlying cause of death
for at least 3.1 million children a year, accounting for fully 45% of all
deaths of children under 5 and stunting the growth of another 165 million.
Dr.
Kwesi Atta-Krah, Director, CGIAR Research Program on Integrated Systems for the
Humid Tropics (Humidtropics), says “the conference offers a platform for
sharing of experiences and research results in systems research for
development, from different countries and regions of the world. It provides a
reminder of the challenges facing global agriculture and food systems, and the
solutions that integrated systems research offers as part of a global effort to
tackle poverty, hunger and environmental degradation.”
The
conference calls upon the donor community, agricultural research institutions,
partners in the wider research and development community, the private sector,
as well as policy and decision-makers to work jointly and strengthen the use of
systems approaches in agricultural research for development.
This
is in order to further advance the contribution of science to the international
community’s commitment to end hunger completely by 2030.
Dr. Frank Rijsberman, Chief Executive
Officer of the CGIAR Consortium, emphasizes, “We cannot simply tread familiar
paths in response to these statistics. Over the next few years we will join
with our partners to redouble our focus on the needs of women and young people,
extend our efforts to improve dietary quality among the poor and vulnerable,
and intensify our work on climate-smart agriculture – all recent additions to
our research agenda.”
Dr.
Nteranya Sanginga, Director General of IITA, similarly emphasizes the
importance of systems research.
He
calls for continued efforts, declaring, “we must develop and promote improved
and nutritious crop varieties of Africa’s major staples, as well as innovative
practices on natural resources management, and innovations on integrated
farming systems towards sustainable intensification of agriculture.”
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