Happenings 1579 (12 July 2013)

Page 1

ICRISAT

Happenings

12 July 2013 No. 1579

In-house Newsletter

Photo: KPC Rao, ICRISAT

Participants of the 4th AgMIP-Eastern Africa Regional meeting held in Nairobi.

Combating climate change

Eastern Africa holds 4th Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement regional meeting in Nairobi How can model intercomparison and improvement substantially impact world food security as affected by climate variability and change, and improve adaptation capacity in both developing and developed countries? This is the mission of the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project (AgMIP), a major international collaborative effort to assess the state of global agricultural modelling and to understand climate impacts on the agricultural sector.

C

limate, crop and economic model experts in Eastern Africa met in Nairobi on 1-5 July to share results and report on AgMIP’s progress and activities, and to prepare for the sub-Saharan Africa wide meeting scheduled to be held on 15-19 July. This 4th regional meeting was attended by 30 participants representing national agricultural research, meteorological and academic institutions in four participating countries – Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.

AgMIP Eastern Africa is one of the five projects in sub-Saharan Africa operating under this global initiative with support from UKAid, and is led by ICRISAT Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA). Four participating country teams composed of climate, crop and economic model experts were constituted and trained in the use of crop simulation models (APSIM and DSSAT) and economic model (TOA-MD). to page 2 ...4


Eastern Africa holds 4th Agricultural Model Intercomparison ...from page 1 During the meeting, the four country team leaders presented the substantial progress they have achieved in generating downscaled climate scenarios and calibrating and validating crop simulation models APSIM and DSSAT in the target locations. The goal is to realistically simulate the performance of locally relevant varieties with the management practices currently employed by smallholder farmers, setting up and running the models to simulate the performance of maize under current and future climates, and to operationalize the economic models to assess economic impacts of changes in crop productivity.

Photo: KPC Rao, ICRISAT

Members of the climate team analyzing climate change projections.

The climate teams have generated and analyzed downscaled climate scenarios for 15 locations from 20 general circulation models (GCMs) to mid (20402070) and end century (2070-2100) periods. All GCMs predicted higher increase in minimum temperatures compared to maximum temperatures, and more than 75% of the GCMs predicted substantial increase in rainfall at all locations. These climate scenarios were then integrated with crop simulation models to assess the climate sensitivity of varieties and management practices those smallholder farmers in the target locations have adopted. During the meeting, simulations were conducted for baseline and for one of the future climate scenarios, using the data collected from about 1000 farmers in the four countries. The results of the simulation analysis and insights helped in better understanding the impacts of climate change on performance of

maize in the region and in identifying management practices that can help adapt the systems to the identified negative impacts. Results of the crop simulation analysis are currently being analyzed by the economic team for impacts on food security and income of the maize growing farmers. The meeting helped the country teams in refining and testing the methodology, gain experience in setting up the model runs and in analyzing the results. One of the problems faced by the teams is in analyzing large amounts of data generated through simulation analysis and deriving information on key trends. Dr Ioannis N. Athanasiadis from the Democritus University of Thrace, Xanthi, Greece and G. Sridhar from ICRISAT-Ethiopia have developed R scripts and VB macros which helped the participants in the analysis of data. The meeting discussed and agreed on a way forward that included completing the assessment with projections from all the 40 downscaled climate scenarios for mid and end century periods. g

Request for submission of ICRISAT communication/media coverage All communication/media coverage (links, pdf files or scanned copies of impact/feature stories, blog articles, videos, slide/photo stories) from all ICRISAT locations must be submitted to the Strategic Marketing and Communication (J.Kane-Potaka@cgiar.org or C.Bejosano@cgiar.org) for proper consolidation and sharing of outputs, and for monitoring of our marketing and communication strategy. Submission to the relevant CGIAR Research Programs is in addition to the ICRISAT submission and not a substitution. Many thanks for your usual cooperation.

2 ICRISAT HAPPENINGS 12 JULY 2013 1579


Strengthening ICRISAT-Philippines partnership

Technical assistance to enhance agricultural productivity in Ilocos Sur province mapped out In the Philippines, rainfed agriculture is an important sector, covering three-fourths of the 10 million hectares of its total cultivated area. Important as it is, rainfed agriculture is a neglected sector, receiving little investment and policy support despite contributing about 40% of total food production supply in the country.

I

n the northern Philippine province of Ilocos Sur, however, rainfed agriculture is now on top of the provincial government’s agenda as the key to agricultural productivity and improved livelihoods of smallholder farmers. Towards this, Ilocos Sur Vice Governor Deogracias Victor Savellano accompanied by his wife, Ms Dina Bonnevie, visited the ICRISAT headquarters on 10-12 July to learn Photo: PS Rao, ICRISAT from the institute’s rainfed agriculture Ilocos Sur Vice Governor DV Savellano (center, right) with his wife, innovations which could be the best bets in alleviating poverty and improving Ms Dina Bonnevie, in a meeting with Dr Dar and senior staff to map out initiatives to enhance agricultural productivity in the province. food security in the province. He also interacted and worked with ICRISAT scientists in In response, Vice Governor Savellano expressed jointly mapping out agriculture research, commitment to facilitate the approval and development and extension (RD&E) initiatives to implementation of a collaborative project with ICRISAT revitalize rainfed agriculture in his province. on the adoption of the Bhoochetana approach to improve livelihoods of smallholder farmers by In a meeting with the Vice Governor, Director enhancing agricultural productivity in Ilocos Sur General William Dar emphasized that rainfed areas province. The proposed project, dubbed as Sustainable will be the hardest hit by increasing water scarcity, Intensification for Prosperity and Growth (or SIPAG, frequent droughts, rising temperatures, new pests meaning ‘hardwork’ in Filipino language) is a technical and diseases, shorter growing seasons and degraded assistance initiative aimed at increasing crop natural resources particularly amid the threat of productivity, cropping intensity and farmers’ income in climate change. To surmount this, the government the province by 20% in three years while improving must pursue an integrated, holistic approach to and/or maintaining soil health. The Vice Governor has rainfed agriculture development such as ICRISAT’s promised to present the proposal during the provincial Bhoochetana program. to page 4 ...4

Photo: PS Rao, ICRISAT

At the DG’s office welcoming the Vice Governor and his wife.

Photo: PS Rao, ICRISAT

Vice Governor DV Savellano at the Kothapally village watershed in Ranga Reddy district, Andhra Pradesh. ICRISAT HAPPENINGS 12 JULY 2013 1579 3


Agricultural development through agribusiness

NAIP-ICAR and ICRISAT to organize Agri-Tech Investors Meet

T

he National Agricultural Innovation Project (NAIP) of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) in collaboration with ICRISAT will be holding a two-day Agri-Tech Investors Meet at the NASC Complex, New Delhi on 18-19 July. The Agri-Tech Investors Meet is a unique technology commercialization platform that will showcase ready-to-commercialize agri-technologies from different sectors of agriculture and promote business incubation services. To be featured are presentations of agro-technologies developed under the NAIP and pre-selected through business-to-business (B2B) meetings. The 22 Business Planning and Development (BPD) Units of NAIP will also be featured to promote its incubator services for agro-enterprises and for small and medium enterprises (SMEs). The event will be attended by a wide range of participants, from industry officials, scientists, entrepreneurs and incubator professionals. “By helping nurture innovations and entrepreneurship in agriculture through its AgriBusiness Incubation (ABI) program, ICRISAT is fulfilling its mission to help eliminate poverty and improve livelihoods of smallholder farmers in the drylands. The Agri-Tech Investors Meet, in particular, will serve as a platform for promoting incubator services to start-ups, such as providing innovators an opportunity to explore and incubate their ideas to facilitate technology commercialization through

public-private partnerships,” said ICRISAT Director General William D. Dar. Highlighting the importance of the meet, ICAR Director General S Ayyappan said, “Indian agriculture is full of challenges and opportunities. To accelerate agricultural growth, the way forward is to create a robust entrepreneurship climate within the sector. The Agri-Tech Investors Meet seeks to promote entrepreneurship in agriculture and accelerate the successful development of entrepreneurial companies and activities through an array of business support resources and services,” Dr Ayyappan added. The conference will showcase more than 70 ready-tocommercialize agro-technologies from different agricultural sectors – crops, horticulture, food technology, veterinary, agri-engineering, agri-inputs, and fisheries. In addition, B2B meetings will be held with over 60 top-level scientists from ICAR. The two-day meet is being organized with the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) as industrial partner and the Indian School of Business (ISB) Munjal Institute for Global Manufacturing as knowledge partner. g

Technical assistance to enhance agricultural productivity...from page 3 strategic planning workshop to be held this month for approval and funding consideration by the provincial government of Ilocos Sur. Prior to the ICRISAT headquarters, the Vice Governor visited the Bhoochetana program in Bangalore, Karnataka along with Dr Suhas Wani, Assistant Research Program Director – Resilient Dryland Systems. There he met with Dr KV Sarvesh, Director of Agriculture and other state government officials, agricultural extension workers, and farmer leaders, where he had discussions on the successes and impacts of the program. At the ICRISAT campus, Vice Governor Savellano visited the Genebank, Center of Excellence in 4 ICRISAT HAPPENINGS 12 JULY 2013 1579

Genomics, Platform for Translational Research on Transgenic Crops, Agribusiness and Innovation Platform, and the institute’s experimental and demonstration farms. He also had a tour of the Kothapally village watershed model in Ranga Reddy district, Andhra Pradesh. The Bhoochetana program is based on learnings from the on-farm Adarsha integrated watershed management in Kothapally which have been scaled-up in Karnataka. The Vice Governor likewise had interactions with scientists on ICRISAT’s Inclusive Market Oriented Development (IMOD) approach and Information and Communication Technology (ICT)-based innovative extension delivery systems for development. g


ICRISAT Malawi holds field day for groundnut breeders and genebank managers

T

o expose groundnut breeders and genebank managers to germplasm materials being maintained at ICRISAT Malawi, the Groundnut Breeding team organized a field day on 24 June for collaborating researchers in Eastern and Southern Africa. Partners from Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique participated in the field day. The event also presented an opportunity for the research partners to collectively plan for the implementation of the CGIAR Research Programs on GrainLegumes and on Genebank. The field day had four events: (1) Assessment and selection of diverse groundnut accessions to be subsequently used by partners in their breeding programs; (2) A guided tour of breeding and seed systems activities to identify capacity areas for support to partners; (3) Planning for germplasm acquisition from partner countries and genebanks as well as sharing of materials available at ICRISAT; and (4) Discussions on the way forward to strengthen research for development partnerships.

Photo: P Okori, ICRISAT

Partners assessing and selecting accessions of their choice during the field day.

During the interactions, the researchers expressed preference for materials with traits such as earliness, drought tolerance, aflatoxin resistance, large seed, and high-yield potential. The participants’ selections will be dispatched and new explorations to collect and access more germplasm will be executed as a result of the field day. g

AgMIP partners meet to discuss Indo-Gangetic Basin project

U

nder the AgMIP-ICAR collaborative project “Strengthening simulation approaches for understanding, projecting and managing climate risks in stress-prone environments across the central and eastern Indo-Gangetic Basin (IGB),” a boot camp was jointly organized by the South Asian Regional Coordination Team, ICRISAT and the IGB project team of ICAR at the ICRISAT headquarters on 24-28 June.

It was attended by 12 participants from India, Nepal and Bangladesh, and was coordinated jointly by Dr N Subhash of IGB and Dr Dileepkumar Guntuku, AgMIP South Asia Coordinator. Dr Guillermo A Baigorria participated as AgMIP Resource Person for the IGB project. g

The activity brought together climate, crop and economic modelling scientists of the IGB project to discuss various issues related to the integration of inputs and outputs of different models, for an integrated assessment of climate change in agricultural systems in IGB. During the boot camp, the IGB project partners discussed climate scenario generation of study sites, assemblage of survey data, simulation of rice and wheat farm yield, historical yield simulation, and future yield simulation.

Photo: ICRISAT

Participants of the AgMIP IGB project boot camp. ICRISAT HAPPENINGS 12 JULY 2013 1579 5


Partnership to strengthen mobile-based advisory system sealed

T

o promote effective mobilebased advisory system to help improve smallholder farmers’ access to knowledge and information, ICRISAT signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the IFFCO Kisan Sanchar Limited (IKSL) to promote the sustainable “Krishi Vani” model of delivering voice advisories to Photo: PS Rao, ICRISAT farmers. The agreement was Director General WD Dar exchanging the MoU with Mr S Srinivasan. signed by Director General William D. Dar and IKSL Chief Executive Officer S “This is an excellent instrument in providing the last Srinivasan on 5 July at the ICRISAT headquarters. mile connectivity to smallholder farmers,” said Dr Dar during the agreement signing. He also Through the agreement, ICRISAT and IKSL have underscored the importance of advisories related agreed to collaborate on: (1) five free voice messages to market intelligence. Mr Srinivasan added “Jointly to farmers and farm facilitators on a daily basis; (2) we shall work together to mitigate the situation call-back facility; and (3) focused services for groups with common interest by providing Green SIM cards. related to food shortage with this latest technology.” These voice messages as prepared by experts will be delivered at one go to millions of farmers in different areas of India. Krishi Vani is a financially sustainable, innovative ICT-mediated extension system. It brings private sector participation into public interest, where farmers get free advisories, farm facilitators and IKSL can generate revenue, and ICRISAT can promote a platform for communicating with smallholder farmers directly. This is a proven revenue model that has generated Rs 31,000 in 15 working days for farm facilitators in Anantapur district.

Dr Dar and Dr Dileepkumar Guntuku also discussed with the IKSL delegation the importance of leveraging mobile technology for empowerment of people living in rural India, with a mission to improving the quality of decision-making by people in the villages through useful information inputs in local language and voice format. Also present on the occasion were Mr Sumanthkumar from ICRISAT, and Mr Narayanarao, Mr John, Mr Siddannagouda and Mr Satish from IKSL. g

Safety awareness and orientation program held

T

he Environment, Health and Safety Committee (EHSC) conducted a one-day Safety Awareness and Orientation Program for 46 safety wardens and new staff of ICRISAT and partner organizations at the ICRISAT headquarters on 2 July. The participants learned about best practices, policies and procedures at the institute for enabling a safe, healthy and environment-friendly workplace. During the program, Director General William D. Dar emphasized the need to minimize potential accidents inside the campus by following safety measures and safety related infrastructure. Deputy Director 6 ICRISAT HAPPENINGS 12 JULY 2013 1578

General Dave Hoisington gave an overview of the risk management objectives, policies and framework at ICRISAT, while Acting Director – Human Resources and Operations, Surya Kant Sharma presented the institute’s safety management policies, practices and mechanisms. g

Photo: PS Rao, ICRISAT

Participants of the safety awareness and orientation program.


Workshop on building representative agricultural pathways

T

o facilitate the development of future agricultural and socioeconomic models on climate change adaptation, a one-day workshop on “Building Representative Agricultural Pathways” Photo: D Murthy, ANGRAU was conducted on 2 July At the workshop on Building Representative Agricultural Pathways (RAP), ANGRAU. at the Agro Climate Research Center, Acharya NG Ranga Agricultural defining plausible futures for South India. University (ANGRAU), Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, Dr Dileepkumar Guntuku, AgMIP South Asia India. Coordinator and ICRISAT’s Global Leader for Knowledge Sharing and Innovation, discussed The workshop sought to develop regional AgMIP’s South Asia project goals and activities, and Representative Agricultural Pathways through the importance of integrated assessment of climate discussions among an interdisciplinary team of change impacts on principal crops and cropping scientists on qualitative narration of future systems. agricultural and socioeconomic scenarios. Speaking during the event, Dr Padma Raju, Vice Chancellor, The workshop was attended by 24 participants from ANGRAU underscored the impact of bio-physical ANGRAU and private companies. Drs Raji Reddy, conditions which are critical to agriculture, as well as Dakshina Murthy, and Sunandhini from ANGRAU social, economic and institutional conditions for coordinated the event. g

Retirement

Visitors’ log Halilou Iro, Senior Associate, ICRISAT Niger, retired on 30 June after 23 years of service to the institute.

Erratum: Mrs Koura Mariama who retired on 30 June, served ICRISAT Niger, not ICRISAT Mali as earlier published.

New appointments Dr S Gopalakrishnan, Senior Scientist (Bioproducts), Research Program – Grain Legumes (SMG cadre), has been appointed as Senior Scientist (Bioproducts) in the Special Project Scientist (SPS) cadre, from 1 July.

8 July: Eighty (80) students from Silver Oak School, Hyderabad. 9 July: Seventy two (72) students from Silver Oak School, Hyderabad; Shri Bhavani Sankar, Shri GV Rao, and DR Murthy, PowerGrid Corporation of India Limited, Hyderabad.

Mr B Ramaiah, Senior Scientific Officer, has been appointed as Manager – Field Research Operations (Sorghum Breeding), Research Program – Dryland Cereals, from 1 July in the SMG Cadre. Team ICRISAT congratulates them and wishes them all success.

ICRISAT HAPPENINGS 12 JULY 2013 1579 7


Welcome Dr Sobhana (Shoba) Sivasankar, a citizen of the USA, joined on 11 July, as Director, CGIAR Research Program on Dryland Cereals. Shoba has spent most of her career with Pioneer Hi-Bred International (a DuPont Business) Johnston, Iowa, and was until recently the Leader of the Corn Drought Tolerance Gene Evaluation program, where she led the effort for the improvement of transgenic drought tolerance in maize. Born in the southern Indian state of Kerala, Shoba received her early education in the same state, and earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the Kerala Agricultural University in 1980, and a Master of Science degree from the same university in 1983. After working as faculty in her Alma Mater from 1983 to 1990, Shoba went to Canada for higher studies and was awarded a PhD from the University of Guelph in 1995 for her thesis on, “Regulation of the acquisition, partitioning and assimilation of nitrate during early seedling growth in Zea mays L.” She was a Post-Doctoral Fellow from 1996 to 1999 in the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, University of Guelph. Her most recent degree is an MBA from the University of Iowa in 2007.

Mr Sharat Kumar will be joining ICRISAT as Director, Human Resources and Operations by midSeptember. Sharat obtained his Masters in Human Resources Management from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai, India. He is currently the Director, Human Resources at the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA). He has over 20 years of experience in fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), information technology (IT), information and technology essential standards (ITES), manufacturing and not-for-profit sector. Prior to joining ICARDA he has worked with the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) and the International Water Management Institute (IWMI). He has taken the lead in several change management programs, designed management systems and processes, and facilitated leadership development programs across Asia, Africa and Latin America. He is a licensed Coach and is an accredited leadership trainer in the CGIAR. We welcome Shoba and Sharat to Team ICRISAT!

Thought for the week It is important for people to realize that we can make progress against world hunger, that world hunger is not hopeless. The worst enemy is apathy. – Reverend David Beckmann

ICRISAT-Patancheru (Headquarters) Patancheru 502 324 Andhra Pradesh, India Tel +91 40 30713071

ICRISAT-Liaison Office CG Centers Block NASC Complex Dev Prakash Shastri Marg New Delhi 110 012, India Tel +91 11 32472306 to 08

ICRISAT-Nairobi (Regional hub ESA) PO Box 39063, Nairobi, Kenya Tel +254 20 7224550

ICRISAT-Bamako (Regional hub WCA) BP 320 Bamako, Mali Tel +223 20 709200

ICRISAT-Niamey BP 12404 Niamey, Niger (Via Paris) Tel +227 20722529

ICRISAT-Bulawayo Matopos Research Station PO Box 776 Bulawayo, Zimbabwe Tel +263 383 311 to 15

ICRISAT-Lilongwe Chitedze Agricultural Research Station PO Box 1096 Lilongwe, Malawi Tel +265 1 707297, 071, 067, 057

ICRISAT- Kano PMB 3491, Sabo Bakin Zuwo Road Tarauni, Kano, Nigeria Tel: +234 7034889836

ICRISAT-Maputo c/o IIAM, Av. das FPLM No 2698 Caixa Postal 1906 Maputo, Mozambique Tel +258 21 461657

ICRISAT is a member of the CGIAR Consortium

www.icrisat.org

Science with a human face


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.