Why Adesina won 2017 World Food Prize Laureate
The World Food Prize Foundation has
explained why Dr Akinwumi Adesina won the 250,000 dollars 2017 World
Food Prize Laureate prize on Monday.
President of the Foundation, Amb.
Kenneth Quinn said Adesina won the prize “for driving change in
African agriculture for over 25 years and improving food security for
millions across the continent”.
Adesina, President of the African
Development Bank (AfDB), was announced on Monday as the 2017 World
Food Prize Laureate at a ceremony at the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in Washington, D.C.
Quinn explained that the selection of
Nigeria’s former Minister of Agriculture for the prize also
“reflected both his breakthrough achievements as Minister of
Agriculture of Nigeria”.
He said Adesina “led a major
expansion of commercial bank lending to farmers as Vice President of
Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) and as Minister of
Agriculture in Nigeria, introduced the E-Wallet system”.
Adesina also “introduced initiatives
to exponentially increase the availability of credit for smallholder
farmers across the African continent and galvanized the political
will to transform African agriculture,” he said.
He said Adesina “grew up in poverty
himself” and embarked on a journey to use his academic training to
“lift up millions of people out of poverty, especially farmers in
rural Africa”.
He explained that “as Nigeria’s
Minister of Agriculture from 2011 to 2015, Adesina successfully
transformed his country’s agriculture sector through bold reforms”.
Quinn said the bold reforms included
creating programmes to make Nigeria self-sufficient in rice
production, and to make cassava become a major cash crop.
He pointed out that in 2006, as
Associate Director for Food Security at the Rockefeller Foundation,
Adesina played a critical leadership role in organizing the Africa
Fertilizer Summit in Abuja.
He said the summit was described as
absolutely essential in igniting the campaign to spread a new Green
Revolution across Africa, which led to the creation of AGRA.
“Our Laureate next played a
leadership role in the development of AGRA, during which he led the
effort to exponentially expand commercial credit for the agricultural
sector and for farmers across the continent.
“And then, as Minister of Agriculture
of his home country Nigeria, our Laureate introduced the E-Wallet
system which broke the back of the corrupt elements that had
controlled the fertilizer distribution system for 40 years.
“The reforms he implemented increased
food production by 21 million metric tonnes and attracted 5.6 billion
dollars in private sector investments, thus earning him the
reputation as the ‘Farmer’s Minister’.”
Quinn said as the first person from
agriculture to ever lead a regional development bank, Adesina’s
receiving the Laureate Prize would give impetus in the coming decade
to his profound vision.
Adesina is also the 46th person and the
sixth African to win the World Food Prize.
Quinn commended Nigeria’s
representation at the event to announce the winner of the Laureate
Prize, won by a distinguished Nigeria.
“I am so pleased that Chargé
d’Affaires Hakeem Balogun could be here for this announcement,”
he said.
Former Minister of Finance Dr Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala was also present at the occasion, as well as U.S.
Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue, Congressmen, Ambassadors and
members of the diplomatic corps.
Adesina will be presented the
250,000-dollar prize and Laureate sculpture at a ceremony at the Iowa
State Capitol on Oct. 19.
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