Contact: USDA Office of Communication (202) 720-4623
of
Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman,
2003 World Food Prize Symposium and 58th World Food Day
Des Moines, IA • October 16, 2003
"Thank you for that very, very nice introduction. "I am truly honored to be here today, and I thank all of you here in Iowa who are responsible for hosting this World Food prize, this year and each and every year.
"On this day, as we work to build an 'International Alliance Against Hunger,' the commitment of the United States to the reduction of hunger and poverty around the world remains strong.
"Our shared goal is challenging and the problems are complex but it is the noblest of goals because as long as there is suffering, we must not relent.
"Americans
are fortunate to live in a society where our greater challenges lie not in the chance of death by starvation but in ensuring that people who are entitled to benefits know about them and get access to them.
"In this country, many don’t think twice about buying a four-dollar cup of coffee at Starbucks but how many of us give a second thought to the fact that half of the
world’s population live on less than two dollars a day?
"For most of us, the next meal is only a trip to the refrigerator away but more than 800 million people in the world, nearly one in seven including 300 million children are chronically hungry.
"Among children, one in three is undernourished and every five seconds, we lose a child to hunger.
"It is a sad irony that acute poverty and hunger are worst in many areas where agriculture is the predominant way of life.
"About one billion of the world's poorest people depend on agriculture for their livelihood.
"Many of them are trapped in a life of subsistence.
"In many developing countries, 90
percent of the food consumed is locally grown.
"It follows that people who are hungry are less able to feed themselves and to be productive members of society.
"The global ramifications of hunger are hard to overstate not just for people in the least developed countries, but also in nations with greater wealth.
"Persistent hunger causes human suffering and death.
"It results in lost productivity and the unrealized potential of entire nations and regions.
"It leads to political instability, economic stagnation, civil unrest, and war.
"It limits economic growth and trade opportunities in other countries.
"We should all be concerned out of a sense of compassion for our fellow human beings.
"But we should also care about hunger because it is at the core of so many of the world’s most intractable problems.
"A recent analysis by the International Food Policy Research Institute suggests that an annual increase in crop and livestock productivity of
just three to four percent in Africa would triple per capita incomes.
"And it would reduce the number of malnourished children by 40 percent.
"This is truly a textbook example of 'a little going a long way.'
"Last year in Rome, I led the U.S. delegation to 'The 2002 World Food Summit.'
"At that time, I discussed the President’s ongoing commitment to the goal of cutting in half the number of hungry people in the world by 2015, what the President calls a 'moral imperative.'
"The priorities of the United States in meeting that goal are:
Reducing hunger by increasing agricultural productivity.
Ending famine.
And improving nutrition.
"The delegates in Rome found progress to be clearly lagging behind. As ministers discussed ways to speed the pace of hunger reduction there was agreement that science and technology play a key role in accelerating agricultural productivity.
"It was in Rome
that I announced the United States would host a Ministerial Conference on Agricultural Science and Technology.
"My thanks to Administrator Natsios for USAID’s support and co-sponsorship of that ministerial which was held this past June in Sacramento, California.
"Administrator Natsios has been an outstanding partner in the Administration's efforts to address
poverty, hunger and development around the world.
"The Sacramento ministerial was a next logical stop on a road that took us through Doha, where developing countries became a major focus of the WTO negotiations, to Monterey, Mexico, and the International Conference on Financing for Development, to Rome and the 2002 World Food Summit and to Johannesburg and the World Summit on Sustainable Development.
"About a thousand participants including 119 ministerial-level participants, including ministers of agriculture, science and technology, health, environment and commerce attended.
"And, 117 countries were represented at this Secretarial Conference.
"It was one of the largest and most diverse gatherings ever of decision-makers from
around the world to address global hunger.
"We looked at technology’s role in helping feed the hungry provide nutrition to the malnourished and lift those in need out of poverty.
"The application of science and technology, along with supportive policies, can help achieve all of this by raising agricultural productivity in an environmentally sustainable way.
"Raising productivity will not merely reduce hunger it will provide a whole host of additional benefits including higher incomes and economic growth.
"This story has been repeated over and over throughout history most recently in Asian countries that have been transformed from subsistence economies into powerhouses of manufacturing and high technology.
"It would be incredibly myopic to believe that these successes cannot be replicated in other developing countries, as well.
"It is great to have with us at this meeting the Father of the Green Revolution, Dr. Borlaug.
"The Green Revolution not only saved hundreds of millions of lives but it helped bring stability and economic growth to the
countries that benefited from it.
"Dr. Borlaug was also present at the Sacramento conference. In his address, he discussed extending the Green Revolution to the Gene Revolution in order to help feed the world’s hungry.
"Biotechnology can produce higher yields and crops that require a fraction of the pesticide applications of other varieties.
"It can produce crops that withstand climate extremes and are better adapted for the needs of individual regions.
"And it can produce plants fortified with nutrients that promote health and nutrition needs such as vitamin A-enriched Golden Rice, which prevents blindness.
"I noted just this week that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
donated $25 million to a project to combat malnutrition around the world including research on Golden Rice. I am sure you have discussed this already at this conference.
"It is an International Alliance in the spirit of the theme for this World Food Day and the type of public-private partnership that must be embraced.
"Just last week, the UN’s Economic Commission
for Africa urged the adoption of biotechnology to increase productivity in an environmentally sustainable way and combat poverty.
"And I noted that the New York Times has tracked the plight of the developing world and a few days ago, an editorial echoed that recommendation:
“I said, 'The world shouldn’t ban genetically modified food. It should develop a cassava
root resistant to the mealy bug and drought proof corn.'
“The real crime of genetic modification, the editorial went on, is not its risks … but that it is squandering its promise.”
"While biotechnology and other advanced technologies hold major potential for productivity gains even basic approaches can make a big difference.
"Just a few days ago, the World Food Program reported that areas in Ethiopia where they invested in basic irrigation and other practices helped to break an endless cycle of drought and famine.
"Irrigation and issues of water quantity and quality emerged as major topics of discussion at the Sacramento Ministerial.
"We need to learn from success stories--many
of which were highlighted at the meeting in Sacramento and many of which apply on a larger scale.
For example:
Small-scale farmers in Uganda increased maize yields 46 percent from 1996 to 2001 through improved conservation practices.
In Tunisia, crop losses to the potato tuber moth dropped 16 percent with the use of integrated pest management practices.
Research by the World Fish Center in Malaysia has produced a strain of tilapia that grows 60 percent faster and yields three harvests per year.
Contoured terraces in Peru boosted potato yields 70 percent, compared with traditional planting on sloping fields.
And in Malawi, farmers are benefiting from a high-yielding, pest-resistant
variety of cassava.
" The answers are not all found in the developed world.
"We can make great strides by helping developing countries adopt and develop their own appropriate agricultural technologies from the conventional to the state-of-the-art.
"We must harness the information that
already exists to help farmers.
"Research is keeping the technology pipeline filled but we must find additional ways for farmers to tap into that pipeline.
"If that agricultural research is not applied, it can be of little practical use.
"It is also vital that we help expand the knowledge base through research and support for local
institutions.
"Delegates in Sacramento discussed the need to revitalize indigenous research institutions and the lack of research on many basic staple foods, especially those in Africa.
"Many developing countries are also looking for ways to get new blood into the study and application of the sciences especially genetics.
"After the end of the Cold War, and even earlier, many institutions that once provided scholarships and educational opportunities withdrew from these activities.
"We have a lost generation as a result and we need to refocus on this as a top priority.
"In order to achieve many of our goals, the building of additional partnerships between and among nations, academia
and industry will be critical.
"The momentum and enthusiasm that were generated in Sacramento are still continuing today.
"Already we are working to build on these efforts.
"We want to establish and continue follow-up sessions in Africa, Latin America and Asia.
"Ministers from Africa and
Latin America offered to host followup regional conferences.
"A Central American regional conference is scheduled for February in Costa Rica.
"And, we anticipate that a regional conference for Africa will take place some timenext year.
"Finding solutions to global hunger and poverty will involve rearranging the priorities of
individual countries to address the most critical areas.
"The search for solutions should be our goal not just on World Food Day but every day.
"The United States is committed to these efforts.
"We are by far the largest contributor to the World Food Program accounting for more than 50 percent of donor funds.
"President Bush has made an unprecedented commitment to international development including what is now called the Millennium Challenge Corporation; a 50 percent increase in our foreign assistance funding over three years or an additional $5 billion per year.
"The Administration is also pursuing a number of other approaches, including an initiative to increase education
funding in Africa; a project to provide clean drinking water to 50 million people in the developing world and $200 million for an emergency rapid-response Famine Fund.
"We at USDA have been working hard in many areas to support that agenda.
"We help administer the international food-assistance programs, which are budgeted this year at nearly $1.6 billion.
"This includes $50 million for the new McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program.
"This program is based on a pilot that provided school meals to nearly seven million children in 38 countries.
"Food for Education not only encourages greater numbers of children to attend school but it also enhances
the performance and learning ability of students in the classroom.
"We are also looking for ways in which our experts can help replicate our own successes in the developing world.
"For instance, USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service is providing guidance for domestic food-assistance programs in other countries.
"The
Zero Hunger initiative in Brazil is based on our own Food Stamp program.
"USDA also has a close partnership with the 1890 Land-Grant Institutions, which are addressing nutrition and agricultural research assistance in Africa.
"While poverty and hunger are major challenges no discussion of solutions would be complete without addressing HIV/AIDS.
"This horrible disease has already killed 20 million people around the world including seven million farmers in Africa, who once tended their land and provided food for their people.
"An additional 42 million people live with the HIV virus.
"The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, which he signed into law this year, would direct
$15 billion over the next five years to battle HIV/AIDS with the focus on Africa and the Caribbean.
"USDA is fortunate to have had several outstanding individuals who have focused on improving the lives of people in this country and around the world.
"Catherine Bertini is one of those people and it is an honor to join her and her fellow laureates on this
World Food Day.
"It was a privilege to be amongst those who nominated her for the World Food Prize in fact, it was an easy call.
"Whether in her work at USDA or later at the World Food Program, Catherine’s main concerns have always been mothers and children.
"She has personally answered the call in places that were
torn by war, natural disaster and famine improving the condition of a suffering child or a hungry mother.
"She came. She saw. She cared.
“Congratulations, Catherine.”
"While our collective goal is to reduce by half the 800 million hungry people around the world even one hungry person is unacceptable.
"That one person is someone’s child, or mother, or father.
"It is one person who is denied the sustenance they need to be a productive member of society.
"It is one person who is prevented from meeting their full potential.
"Behind our efforts, there are statistics but there is also a human face.
"As we search for solutions as we work to apply technology to its fullest potential we must always remember that human face.