Oct 20, 2014
New wheat breeds can help avert food security disaster | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Efforts to develop wheat varieties tolerant to drought, heat, extremely wet and cold conditions must be sped up as temperatures continue to warm and weather becomes more erratic
CGIAR Climate's insight:
Two years after he won the Nobel Peace Prize, Borlaug stepped aside and appointed me head of the CIMMYT wheat breeding program where I spent most of my career fighting alongside other Green Revolutionaries developing resilient wheat varieties, except for the eight years I spent at the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA).
Those wheat varieties are now grown on 58 million hectares (143 million acres) worldwide, contributing to the average 700 million metric tons (770 million tons) of wheat produced annually. We estimate these varieties provide wheat to more than 1 billion people a year.