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Science and Technology in Agriculture – . Creating new synergy and stronger partnerships between the World Bank, CGIAR, and NARS. Sushma Ganguly, The World Bank, Washington D.C. Presentation Outline:. Why Science and Technology? The context is changing: Global integration Societal demand
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Science and Technology in Agriculture – Creating new synergy and stronger partnerships between the World Bank, CGIAR, and NARS Sushma Ganguly, The World Bank, Washington D.C.
Presentation Outline: • Why Science and Technology? • The context is changing: • Global integration • Societal demand • Shift in financing: public and private • Issues for consideration
Science and Technology - for What? • Agricultural productivity and income growth • Important component of rural poverty reduction • Food security and nutrition—global, national • Availability • Access • Utilization • Natural resources conservation
Changes in Societal Context for Food and Agriculture • Globalization of food systems: • Food safety • Product quality and post-harvest issues • Trade, IPRs, International Standards. • Environmental concerns • Biosafety, Biodiversity • “Green trading” • Social and ethical concerns • Animal welfare, bio-piracy
The Context of Agricultural Technology • Key role of agricultural productivity growth - engine of growth, poverty reduction, competitiveness, environment • Agricultural production more knowledge- and skill-intensive => changing technological needs • Rapid advances in science, especially the new biotechnologies and information technologies
Changes in the Societal Context of Science Globally • Shifts in the funding and organizations for agricultural R&D • Private sector involvement growing rapidly • Pluralistic R&D systems with much agricultural R&D outside of the sector • Stagnant and irregular public funding • Traditional role of CGIAR – based primarily on staple crops – what about high value-added products? – production for the market?
Context: Agricultural Research Systems in Developing Countries • Lack of financial sustainability • Critical shortage of operating costs • Complete dependence on public budget • Low salaries and loss of quality scientists • Supply Driven • Lack of stakeholder participation and accountability • Impacts narrowly based • Weak in focusing on the needs of poor farmers • Unable to respond to change • New science, new agenda, new actors
Agricultural Research Requires a Mix of Approaches • Agro-ecological approaches • Social science and policy research • Conventional breeding • Biotechnology (with IT)
Why Should the Bank be Concerned? • Largest donor/investor in agricultural R&D • Modest support to biotech in lending • Increasing requests for support • Largest supporter to CGIAR • IFC support to new industries in several countries • Role in global partnerships
Total Loan Commitments in the Research and Extension Portfolio, 2002
Regional Distribution of Total Research and Extension Portfolio In FY02
Types of Organizations in a Research System • Public • Ministries--Agric., S&T, Environment • Agricultural research institutes • Federal, national, or local • Universities--General and agricultural • Private for profit • Agri-business • Private not-for profit • Foundations, NGOs, Universities
The Growing Role of Private R&D • Determinants of Private R&D • General economic policies • Policies on technology importation and release • Regional integration • Strong public sector R&D • Strengthening of the legal environment (e.g. IPRs)
Agricultural Research Intensity by Region: Public Sector Only Source: Pardey and Beintema, 2001
Intensity of Investments in Agricultural R&D, 1995 Source: Pardey and Beintema, 2001
Major Issues for Future Partnerships in R&D • Facilitate private investment in R&D • Focus of public funding on public goods • Focus public research on natural resources, less favorable areas, and neglected crops • Institutional pluralism in research execution • Allocate funding through competitive grants • Diversification of funding sources for public institutes • Increase client participation
The Future: Increased Focus on Poverty • Integrate socio economic knowledge in designing technology for poverty alleviation • Establish database for monitoring change in rural space - Rural development is more than growth in agriculture • Link research on agriculture with other scientific services: health, education, and infrastructure • Remove boundaries between research disciplines • Integrate universities in NARS • Increase focus on farm incomes and not just production
The Future: Knowledge-Based Agricultural and Rural Growth • Natural resources – finite • Growing scarcity of land and water • Diminishing returns to external inputs • Human ingenuity – unlimited? • Substitution of knowledge for resources and inputs • How to secure an enabling environment to unleash the potential of S&T in agriculture?
CGIAR/WB Collaboration • Bank loans for agricultural research to support country membership in the CGIAR (Brazil) • Several countries used loans to contract CGIAR centers for TA or collaborative research, for e.g. • In Africa ISNAR for capacity building • In Asia CIMMYT, IRRI research programs with NARS on rice-wheat systems • In Latin America, national organizations and a CG center successfully obtained competitive grants set up with Bank loans • IFPRI, ICRISAT, ICAR, Bank study of rainfed agriculture in India
CGIAR/WB Collaboration • Future collaboration • Staff exchanges between the Bank and CG centers • Joint agriculture sector analysis • Sharing of knowledge, information and data on rural poverty, crop productivity and diversification • Is the current structure/focus of CGIAR ready for new challenges?