IRRI, FAO step up joint efforts to globally bolster sustainable rice production
Focus
is on food security and helping poor farmers by enhancing crop
resilience and adapting to climate change
FAO
and the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) have agreed to
cooperate more closely to support sustainable rice production in
developing countries to improve food security and livelihoods while
safeguarding natural resources.
An
agreement signed today seeks to better pool the scientific knowledge
and technical know-how of the two organizations so that they can
expand and intensify their work globally.
The
partnership primarily aims to enhance sustainable rice-based farming
systems through capacity building activities - including assisting
governments draw up and implement national and regional policies and
strategies - to the benefit of small-scale farmers, especially women.
"The
world faces very significant changes over the next few decades to
produce the volume and quality of nutritious food to feed a global
population heading for 10 billion people," said IRRI
Director-General Matthew K. Morell. "Addressing these issues
relies on global partnerships, and today, IRRI is delighted to be
reaffirming through this Memorandum of Agreement our commitment to
work with FAO to enhance sustainable rice-based production and food
systems through awareness raising, capacity development, knowledge
exchange, and evidence-based analyses for policy support."
"With
over three billion people across the globe eating rice every day,
rice is critical to global food security," said Maria Helena
Semedo, FAO Deputy Director-General, Climate and Natural Resources.
"Ensuring sustainable rice production is a key contribution to
the global goal of ending hunger. By teaming up with IRRI, already a
long-standing partner, we will be able to scale up, complement and
amplify our work towards reaching this goal."
Making
the rice value chain more sustainable
In
many countries around the world rice is a staple crop for food
security and consumption trends are growing. At the same time rice
production is vulnerable to the increasing impacts of climate change,
including extreme weather events such as droughts and floods.
Both
FAO and IRRI are actively promoting more sustainable rice practices
throughout the value chain - production, marketing and consumption -
to optimize its nutritional properties and as a means of improving
livelihoods and tackling poverty, particularly in rural areas.
FAO
has developed the Regional Rice Initiative for Asia and Pacific which
promotes enhanced crop resilience while increasing efficiency and
farmers' income. In Africa and in Latin America the UN agency is
engaged in scientific and technical cooperation including the sharing
of technologies and best practices to increase production and
productivity, including reduction of post-harvest losses and improved
grain quality.
IRRI
is engaged in strengthening capacities of all rice sector actors
through its capacity development activities, including IRRI Education
and the Sustainable Rice Platform.
The
Sustainable Rice Platform is a global alliance to promote resource
efficiency and sustainability in trade flows, production and
consumption operations, and supply chains in the global rice sector.
The Sustainable Rice Platform recently established the world's first
standard for sustainable rice. Through the Sustainable Rice Platform,
IRRI aims to use environmental and socio-economic benchmarks to
maintain yields for rice smallholders, reduce the environmental
footprint of rice cultivation and meet consumer needs for food safety
and quality.
At
the same time, IRRI Education works to build capacity through-out
IRRI's extensive partnership network.
Improving
varieties, transferring knowledge
FAO
and IRRI will together assist rice producing countries to adopt
improved and adapted rice varieties, enhance availability of
certified seeds and also the transfer of knowledge - including on
pest management - through participatory approaches such as farmer
fields schools.
The
two organizations will also seek to strengthen partnerships for
post-harvest handling, and help farmers and other rice producers add
value by developing and marketing rice by-products rich in proteins
and micronutrients, and explore the appropriate use of rice
by-products to generate energy, animal feed and other agricultural
products.
In
addition, FAO and IRRI will work together to ensure that women
farmers can participate in viable, safe and dignified entrepreneurial
opportunities in the rice value chain, and that there is an
improvement in work conditions in the rice sector.
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