A major step in the fight against hunger as the CGIAR Consortium attains international organization status

3 minutes read

The CGIAR Consortium, representing the world’s largest global agriculture research partnership aimed at reducing rural poverty and hunger was officially granted international organization status today.

The agreement conferring the status was signed today by Ms. Anne Dorte Riggelsen, Ambassador of Denmark to France on behalf of her government. France and Hungary had already signed the agreement in September 2011. Today’s signature ratifies the agreement.

‘“Achieving International Organization status and recognition is a major step towards enabling the reformed CGIAR to deliver research resulting in real impact; improved food security, health and nutrition alongside sustainable management of natural resources,” said Mr. Carlos Perez del Castillo, CGIAR Consortium Board Chair, who was present at the event. “This status will allow the consortium to operate as an independent organization, speak with one voice at an international level, establish better partnerships and raise awareness of its work at a time when agricultural research is key to the survival of a billion people,” he added.

Over the past four decades, CGIAR has proven that investing in agricultural research has a cost-effective impact on the fight against hunger and malnutrition. In the late 1980s, CGIAR’s research on how to biologically control the cassava mealybug, a pest which was destroying harvests in sub-Saharan Africa, saved at least 20 million lives for a total cost of only USD 20 million. In other words, for every dollar invested, a life was saved.

Since 2010, the CGIAR has been undergoing a major reform to ensure that their research delivers clear impacts like this. With the Consortium becoming an International Organization from today, this not only endorses the strategic reform, but by facilitating fundraising and co-ordination it will catalyze the impact-oriented research essential to the lives of millions of smallholder farmers.

"I am grateful for the support shown by the signatories to the agreement for making this possible,” said Mr. Pérez del Castillo.

Denmark has been working in partnership with CGIAR for 40 years and has donated more than USD 204 million in essential contributions to the organization. This relationship was further strengthened in 2009 when Denmark began hosting in Copenhagen, the country’s capital, the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), a 10-year program that offers developing country farmers new options for adapting to and mitigating emerging impacts of climate change.

CGIAR is also indebted to France, and not just for the country’s role in securing the International Organization status. The CGIAR Consortium Office is headquartered in Montpellier, a well-established, French agricultural research hub. This enhances the French scientific community’s involvement in CGIAR Research Programs such as the Global Rice Science Partnership (GRiSP), a program that works in partnership with, among others, two French organizations, CIRAD and IRD. By 2020, GRiSP aims to lift 72 million smallholder farmers out of poverty and help 40 million achieve food security.

CGIAR is a global research partnership that unites organizations engaged in research for sustainable development. CGIAR research is dedicated to reducing rural poverty, increasing food security, improving human health and nutrition, and ensuring more sustainable management of natural resources. It is carried out by the 15 centers who are members of the CGIAR Consortium in close collaboration with hundreds of partner organizations, including national and regional research institutes, civil society organizations, academia, and the private sector. www.consortium.cgiar.org

Contact:

Enrica Porcari

Acting Director Communications

Email: e.porcari@cgiar.org

Tel : +(33) 601 461 156

or

Vinciane Koenigsfeld

CGIAR Consortium Office

Email: v.koenigsfeld@cgiar.org

Tel: +33 (467) 04 38 29