July 17, 2017

Big Ideas and Emerging Innovations

A farmer reads a message on a cell phone while working on a rice paddy field outside Hanoi, Vietnam. REUTERS/Kham

Poor Nations Need Help to Use Big Data to Tackle Disease, Poverty: Expert
From boosting crop yields to controlling the spread of disease, big data analytics is increasingly being used by poor nations to tackle development challenges—but a lack of technology infrastructure is slowing efforts. Many developing nations are attempting to collect, organize, and analyze large, varied data sets to uncover patterns and trends to help address poverty.

In China's Murky Waters, Global Sewage Firms Seek Rewards
Global sewage and water treatment firms are eyeing opportunities in an unsavory place: a growing pile of waste in China, the world's most populous nation. The country has been for years battling contamination from fertilizer run-offs, heavy metals, and untreated sewage. To reverse this, China has pledged to lay 126,000 kilometers of new sewage pipes by 2020, enough to circle the globe three times, and raise urban wastewater treatment by 50 million cubic meters a day, equal to 20,000 Olympic-size pools.

How the Internet of Things Is Fueling the F-35 of the Farm Fields
Eric Froebel is a man who truly appreciates the sophistication of modern farm equipment—that a state-of-the-art-tractor is more like a fighter jet than the family car. Froebel, who is the Director of Global Engineering Processes and IT Architecture at AGCO Corporation, is not exaggerating. Loaded with sensor-driven telematics, GPS positioning, automatic guidance systems, and wireless data transfer technology, it’s easy to imagine a top-of-the-line tractor as the F-35 of the farm field. And Froebel sees such high-tech machines as a present-day necessity.

Small Company, Mighty Mission: City Girl Coffee Aims to Source Solely from Female Farmers
Nearly 25 years after her parents started a tiny coffee roasting company in a basement in Duluth, Minnesota, Alyza Bohbot agreed to take full ownership of the family business. Acquainting herself with a primarily male-driven coffee industry, she created City Girl Coffee in 2015, a brand that aims to source from women-owned and managed farms—from Brazil to Indonesia—while working to raise consumer awareness of gender inequality in the world’s coffee-producing communities.

About

The Global Food and Agriculture Program aims to inform the development of US policy on global agricultural development and food security by raising awareness and providing resources, information, and policy analysis to the US Administration, Congress, and interested experts and organizations.

The Global Food and Agriculture Program is housed within the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, an independent, nonpartisan organization that provides insight – and influences the public discourse – on critical global issues. The Council on Global Affairs convenes leading global voices and conducts independent research to bring clarity and offer solutions to challenges and opportunities across the globe. The Council is committed to engaging the public and raising global awareness of issues that transcend borders and transform how people, business, and governments engage the world.

Support for the Global Food and Agriculture Program is generously provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Blogroll

1,000 Days Blog, 1,000 Days

Africa Can End Poverty, World Bank

Agrilinks Blog

Bread Blog, Bread for the World

Can We Feed the World Blog, Agriculture for Impact

Concern Blogs, Concern Worldwide

Institute Insights, Bread for the World Institute

End Poverty in South Asia, World Bank

Global Development Blog, Center for Global Development

The Global Food Banking Network

Harvest 2050, Global Harvest Initiative

The Hunger and Undernutrition Blog, Humanitas Global Development

International Food Policy Research Institute News, IFPRI

International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center Blog, CIMMYT

ONE Blog, ONE Campaign

One Acre Fund Blog, One Acre Fund

Overseas Development Institute Blog, Overseas Development Institute

Oxfam America Blog, Oxfam America

Preventing Postharvest Loss, ADM Institute

Sense & Sustainability Blog, Sense & Sustainability

WFP USA Blog, World Food Program USA

Archive


| By Roger Thurow

Turning Nutrition Knowledge Into Action

As part of the "Growing Food for Growing Cities" series, Council senior fellow Roger Thurow speaks about mothers around the word in their struggle to purchase nutritious foods for their families, and his new book, The First 1,000 Days. 









Ann Veneman Honored at Women Making History

The Honorable Ann Veneman, former Executive Director of UNICEF and former Secretary of Agriculture, has been honored by the National Women’s History Museum at their Women Making History Event.