ICARDA Annual Report 2001

Published Date
June 03, 2002
Type
Report
ICARDA Annual Report 2001
Authors:
Communication Team ICARDA

The world is witnessing a period in its history when the increasing socio-political upheavals are taking the lives of thousands, and destroying the natural wealth of our planet. Poverty and food insecurity are two key forces driving this destruction. These ongoing problems compound those already being posed by an increasing shortage of water, scarcity of productive land, an expanding population, and the threat of global warming.
ICARDA strongly believes that solutions to these problems can only be found through innovative partnerships. Working with its partners the Center can widen the scope of its research geared to reduce poverty, increase food production, and protect the natural resource base throughout the dry areas of the world. The year saw a major breakthrough in forging new partnerships.
For example, the war-torn and drought-hit Afghanistan urgently needs support to rebuild its agriculture. In 2001, ICARDA initiated a major international effort—The Future Harvest Consortium to Rebuild Agriculture in Afghanistan—to help the country achieve sustainable development of its agriculture and reduce poverty and hunger. The Consortium is drawing together partners and expertise from many organizations, including the CGIAR, UN agencies, U.S. universities, local and international NGOs, and USAID and other donors. The most immediate problem facing Afghan farmers is the lack of good quality seed, so the Consortium has developed a detailed plan to multiply and deliver quality seed of adapted varieties, and
to establish an efficient seed production system in the country. Needs assessments for medium- and longterm interventions have been started with full participation of the Ministry of Agriculture, Afghanistan.
Reversal of the trends in land degradation requires a holistic approach that focuses on three key components. First are technological interventions that address land, water and food security problems. Second is the active involvement of local communities employing a strategy that increases their knowledge and organizational capacity. With increased capacity to solve problems and to manage risk, communities can reverse land degradation, generate employment opportunities, improve their livelihoods, and become responsible stewards of the natural resources. Thirdly, appropriate incentives at the policy and institutional level are required to stimulate land users to adopt new technologies to improve their income and quality of life.

Citation:
Communication Team ICARDA. (3/6/2002). ICARDA Annual Report 2001. Aleppo, Syria: International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA).
Keywords:
sunn pest
west asia
semi-arid zones
nutritive quality
arabian peninsula
south asia and china
central asia and the caucasus
cold
goats
sheep
shrubs
steppes
poverty
training
aegilops
pastures
land use
research
ruminants
trifolium
livestock
land races
vegetation
trigonella
arid zones
vicia faba
harvesting
irrigation
rangelands
reclamation
development
fruit trees
middle east
pest control
genetic maps
biodiversity
malnutrition
feed legumes
north africa
pisum sativum
sustainability
lens culinaris
triticum durum
remote sensing
cicer arietinum
medicago sativa
human resources
crop production
disease control
hordeum vulgare
farming systems
pest resistance
seed production
dryland farming
microsatellites
genetic markers
water harvesting
water management
lathyrus sativus
stubble cleaning
rural communities
animal production
genetic variation
rural development
triticum aestivum
vicia narbonensis
plant collections
genetic resources
research networks
genetic resistance
drought resistance
mechanical methods
agroclimatic zones
biological control
resource management
grassland management
agronomic characters
resource conservation
germplasm conservation
temperature resistance
agricultural development
diffusion of information
international cooperation
environmental degradation
geographical information systems