Building intellectual bridges and shared agendas / Strategy and example: gend...
Cgiar presentation cpc october 29
1. A strategic partnership dedicated to advancing science to address the central
development challenges of our time:
• Reducing rural poverty
• Improving food security
• Improving nutrition and health
• Sustainably managing natural resources
Its research is carried out by 15 International Agricultural Research Centers,
working in close collaboration with hundreds of partners worldwide.
www.cgiar.org
2. The new CGIAR System and Progress
towards the implementation of
GCARD Roadmap
Carlos Perez del Castillo
Punta del Este, Uruguay.
October 29th , 2012
6. An important and challenging cultural change
FROM TO
15 independents Centers Centers united in CGIAR Consortium
60 donors loosely coordinated Donors united in CGIAR Fund
A Center focused approach research A program-focused research agenda
Different Centers’ strategies A CGIAR Strategy and Results Framework
3000 bilateral projects More development -oriented results and outcomes
through 16 CRPs
Individual Central governance Streamlined System-level governance with clear
accountability
Different reporting required by donors Harmonized reporting for all CRPs
Uncertain resources Multi-year commitment funding
7. Progress toward ARD ....
Centers Consortium
CRPs
Projects One
Partners Fund Voice on
ARD
Partners Donors
Centers
Past Current Future
8. The six-point plans of 2010 Roadmap for transforming
AR4D
1) The need for collective focus on key priorities, as determined and
shaped by science and society,
2) The need for true and effective partnership between research and those
it serves,
3) Increased investments to meet the huge challenges ahead and ensure
the required development returns from AR4D
4) Greater capacities to generate, share and make use of agricultural
knowledge for development change among all actors
5) Effective linkages that embed research in the wider development
context and actions enabling developmental change
6) Better demonstration and awareness of the development impact and
returns from agricultural innovation
9. How has the CGIAR contributed to
the six-point plans of the
2010 GCARD Roadmap?
10. 1. The need for collective focus on key priorities, as determined and
shaped by science and society
11. 3 CRPs to improve farming systems
CRP Objective CGIAR Centres involved
To develop technology, policy and
institutional innovations to improve ICARDA, Bioversity, IWMI,
Dryland Systems livelihoods, targeting the poor and ICRISAT, CIP, ICRAF, WorldFish,
highly vulnerable populations in dry ILRI
areas.
Transform the lives of rural poor in
Bioversity, CIAT, CIP, FARA, ICIPE,
the humid lowlands, moist savannas
Humid Tropics IITA, ILRI, IWMI,
and tropical highlands in tropical
WorldAgroforestry Centre
Americas, Asia and Africa.
Reduce poverty and improve food
Aquatic
security for people whose
Agriculture Bioversity, IWMI, Worldfish
Systems livelihoods depend on aquatic
agricultural systems
12. One CRP to improve markets, policy and institutions,
and other CRP dedicated to improve health and
nutrition
CRP Objective CGIAR Centres involved
Establish how policies, institutions, and
Policies, markets can be used most effectively BIOVERSITY, CIAT, CIMMYT, CIP,
Institutions, and to reduce poverty, improve food ICARDA, ICRAF, ICRISAT, IFPRI,
Markets security, and grow small producers’ IITA, ILRI, and WORLDFISH
incomes
Agriculture for Accelerate progress in improving the Bioversity, CIAT, CIMMYT, CIP,
Improved
Nutrition and
nutrition and health of poor people ICARDA, ICRAF, ICRISAT, IFPRI,
Health exploiting synergies with Agriculture. IITA, ILRI, IWMI, WorldFish Center
13. 7 CRPs to improve crops, fish and livestock
CGIAR Centres
CRP Objective involved
Dramatically boost farm-level wheat
productivity and stabilize wheat prices, while
Bioversity,
renewing and fortifying the crop's resistance to
CIMMYT,ICARDA,
WHEAT globally important diseases and pests,
ICRISAT, IFPRI, ILRI, IRRI
enhancing its adaptation to warmer climates,
and IWMI
and reducing its water, fertilizer, labor and fuel
Requirements
Stabilize maize prices and double the
productivity of maize‐based farming systems,
making them more resilient and sustainable IITA, CIAT, CIMMYT,
MAIZE and significantly increasing farmers’ income ICRISAT, IFPRI, ILRI,
and livelihood opportunities, without using WAC
more land and as climates change and fertilizer,
water, and labor costs rise
14. Continued…
CGIAR Centres
CRP Objective
involved
Reduce poverty and hunger,
improve human health and nutrition, reduce the
GRiSP (Rice) environmental footprint and enhance ecosystem Africa Rice, CIAT, IRRI
resilience of rice production systems through high-quality
international rice research, partnership, and leadership
Raise the productivity of these crops to meet
Dryland CIAT, ICARDA,
Cereals
growing demand, while retaining or even increasing
ICRISAT and IITA
their resilience against stresses.
Improving chickpea, common bean, cowpea,
groundnut (or peanut), faba bean, lentil, pigeonpea
Grain
Legumes
and soybean crops grown by poor smallholder ICARDA, ICRISAT
families in five regions including Eastern, Western,
Southern and Central Africa.
15. Continued..
CGIAR Centres involved
CRP Objective
To tap the underutilized potential of
root, tuber, and banana crops to Bioversity International, CIP,
RTB
improve food security, nutrition, and IITA, CIAT
livelihoods
Increase productivity of small‐scale
livestock and fish systems so as to
increase availability and affordability of
Livestock and meat, milk and fish for poor consumers CIAT, ICARDA, ILRI, WorldFish
Fish and, in doing so, to reduce poverty Center
through greater participation by the
poor along animal source food value
chains.
16. 3 CRPs to improve sustainability of natural resource
base, climate change adaptation and mitigation
CGIAR Centres
CRP Objective
involved
Bioversity, CIAT,
CIMMYT, CIP,
Learn how to intensify farming activities,
ICARDA, ICRISAT,
expand agricultural areas and restore degraded
Water, Land IITA, ILRI, IWMI,
and Ecosystems
lands, while using natural resources wisely and
WorldFish Center,
minimizing harmful impacts on supporting
World Agroforestry
ecosystems.
Centre, AfricaRice,
IRRI
Sustainable increases in the productivity and
production of healthy food by and for the poor
Bioversity,
Forests, Trees, and use of natural resources and biodiversity to
CIAT, CIFOR, World
Agroforestry improve the livelihoods of the poor in response
Agroforestry Centre
to climate change. Promote policy and
institutional change.
Overcome the threats to agriculture and food
Climate Change,
security in a changing climate, exploring new All CGIAR Centers
Agriculture and
Food Security ways of helping vulnerable rural communities (CIAT lead centre)
adjust to global changes in climate.
17. Gender: Mainstreaming gender research in the CRPs
From Gender Platform to
CGIAR Consortium Gender
Strategy
CRPs have their Gender Research Strategy
CGIAR Gender and Agriculture Research Network
Senior Expert on Gender at the system level and a gender
working team in each CRP.
18. 2. The need for true and effective partnership
between research and those it serves
CRPs: To be eligible for funding, CRPs must engage in effective partnerships with
stakeholders to clearly identifying their role across the R&D process and leading to
concrete impact on the ground
CRPs: were developed together with partners & stakeholders
CRPs: developed effective mechanisms and processes along CRP impact pathways
As a Result:
Partners work in CRPs as:
i. co management (including M&E)
ii. co implementation
Different types of partnerships
GCARD II (Wide stakeholder participation provide inputs to CRPs how to
strengthen partnerships)
19. 3. Increased investments to meet the huge challenges ahead
and ensure the required development returns from AR4D
• GCARD I highlighted that a CGIAR budget of US$ 1.6 billion (10%
of total public R&D spending) by 2025 is required to make
appropriate contribution to food security and poverty reduction
• Our original objective in 2008
was to double our funding 1000
Projected
from US$ 550 800
to US$ 1 billion 600
in 10 years. 400
US$
mill
200
0
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
20. 4. Greater capacities to generate, share and make use of
agricultural knowledge for development change among all
actors
CGIAR is a thought leader in agricultural research for development.
CGIAR generates huge amounts of data and knowledge related to
agricultural and natural resources from across the world.
CGIAR supports an environment where sharing knowledge across
research community is encouraged to improve likelihood of impact
on the ground.
Results
More than 80,000 scientists trained over the last 40 years
Many Communities of practice across the system (Gender, IPR,
Capacity Building, Knowledge Managers...
Institutional processes that support opening access to research
products
A new cgiar.org with more than 3,000 documents and growing
21. 5. Effective linkages that embed research in the wider
development context and actions enabling developmental
change
The CGIAR SRF Price Trade
Policy REDD, PES,
emphasis on shift in Reserve Policy
research towards more Climate
integrated approaches Post Harvest
Land Scape
change
mitigation
Cropping Productions
system Systems
Soil, Water,
Forages,
Genomics: Crop Agroforestry,
improvement Aquaculture
Climate Change
adaptation
22. 6. Better demonstration and awareness of the development
impact and returns from agricultural innovation
The Consortium is working with a new concept of management for
results with concrete and measurable outcomes for the assessment
of the CRP activities
The CGIAR Performance Management System:
A strategic and an integrated approach to delivering successful results
by improving the performance and developing the capabilities of
CRPs
This is one of the key component of the SRF Action Plan submitted to
the Fund Council by the COnsortium