USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah testifies before Congressional committees
USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah testified before Congressional committees this week. According to the administrator, Feed the Future assisted more than 7 million farmers to increase their yields and helped to improve the nutrition of 12 million children in 2012. The President also requested $506.3 million for the Global Climate Change Initiative and $2.7 billion for USAID Global Health Program. Read his full testimony before the Senate Appropriations Committee and USAID’s FY15 Congressional Budget Justification.
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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.
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Chris Policinski, President and CEO of Land O’Lakes, Inc. writes that we need a generation that helps grow, produce and distribute more food, in an increasingly productive and sustainable way, in order to feed a growing global population.
Paul E. Weisenfeld of RTI International explains: what will it take to implement programs on the ground to actually achieve the ambitious Sustainable Development Goals?
Shawn Baker, Director, Nutrition at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation outlines their strategy to build on evidence to scale up success in nutrition and create broader impact.
USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack writes that feeding a growing population will require food systems that can feed hundreds of millions of new global citizens, maintain a healthy planet and grow healthy economies.
Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr., president of Purdue University, explains that research universities and their investments in students will be essential in order to feed 9 billion by 2050.
Malô Cofounder Salif Romano Niang writes that in order to achieve Africa’s food production potential, its youth and in particular, those willing to learn and become entrepreneurs need to be supported.
Dr. David Fleming of PATH explains how the private sector and global health sector can together develop the innovations needed to address global malnutrition.
Sunny Verghese of Olam International Limited writes that, while the challenges surrounding food security can seem insurmountable, in practice, real world solutions are possible.
GAIN Executive Director Marc Van Ameringen highlights that urban food systems must now become an international development priority if we are to feed growing city populations.