November 6, 2003
by Katie Mantell,
SciDev.Net
The International Crops
Research Institute for Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) has
announced that it is to retain its headquarters in Patancheru in
India.
The decision puts an end to speculation that the institute — one
of the 16 international research centres that make up the
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR) — would move its headquarters to sub-Saharan Africa.
An external review panel set up by the CGIAR recommended in July
that the institute relocate in order to focus its research on
African problems (see below).
But at CGIAR's annual general meeting last week in Nairobi,
Kenya, ICRISAT announced that it would invest more core
resources in sub-Saharan Africa — where it already has three
regional stations — while keeping its headquarters in India to
sustain the institute's Asian activities.
ICRISAT will also set up a task force to suggest ways to enhance
the institute's research programmes and management in both sub-Saharan
Africa
and
Asia.
In Africa, the task force will focus on ways to encourage
market-driven agriculture, diversify farming systems, apply new
science to scale up technologies and harness the power of
information and communication technologies. Its focus in Asia,
meanwhile, will be on biotechnology and crop improvement.
New Delhi, India
24 July 2003
Crop research centre 'should move HQ to
Africa'
K. S. Jayaraman
Source:
SciDev.Net
The
International Crops Research Institute for Semi-Arid Tropics
(ICRISAT), currently located near Hyderabad in India, has been
advised to move its headquarters to
Africa to help focus its research on the problems of that continent.
The
recommendation has been made by a five-member external review
panel chaired by Paul Vlek of the Centre for Development
Research in Bonn, Germany, which argues that “ICRISAT must find
a way of accomplishing the same successes in Africa as it has
achieved in Asia”.
The panel
was set up by the Washington-based Consultative Group on
International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), the body that runs
ICRISAT and 15 other agricultural research centres around the
world.
ICRISAT,
which already has three regional stations in
Africa, was set up more than 30 years ago to focus on research on
crops such as millet, groundnut, chick pea and sorghum that are
important in arid regions of
Africa and India.
It has
recently diversified into areas such as improving cash crops,
livestock rearing, biotechnology and transgenic crops. But
questions have been raised both about this strategy — adopted
partly in a bid to raise outside funding — and about whether
India is the most appropriate location for its headquarters,
given the country’s recent successes in achieving food
self-sufficiency.
The centre
has already been hit by declining donor support. This year's
budget of US$22.3 million is US$1.5 million lower than last
year, and has led the institute to cut its workforce by 200 to
about 600, the lowest since the institute was set up in 1972.
In its
report, which was submitted on 11 July, the panel now says that
ICRISAT “should rapidly restructure its programmes and transfer
its headquarters and virtually all of its programmes to
sub-Saharan
Africa.”
It
recommends that ICRISAT should limit its role in
Asia to strategic plant genetic resources and enhancement
(PGRE) for the so-called ‘mandate crops’. It asks the institute
to give up its other roles such as water and soil management and
enhancing livestock productivity to national agencies, and to
re-deploy the resources used to meet these commitments in
Africa.
The panel
said that in its view, the most desirable future option for
ICRISAT would be for its African programmes to be “significantly
strengthened”, while PGRE research would be carried out in
Pattancheru, near Hyderabad, where ICRISAT's gene bank is
located.
In the
panel's view, ICRISAT is better placed to make a future impact
in Africa — where national agricultural research systems are
weak — than in
Asia, which is already “a region of major economic and
technological advances.”
William
Dar, director general of ICRISAT, announced earlier this year
that the centre is to receive a share in the US$16 million
earmarked by the Global Environmental Facility for a five-year
research project on a "desert margin initiative" in sub-Saharan
Africa.
The panel
praises ICRISAT's “remarkable scientific accomplishments”. But
it criticises the centre for failing to strike an adequate
balance between the needs of Africa and Asia.
So far,
there has been no comment from ICRISAT on the review panel’s
recommendations, although Dar has told his staff that the
management and governing board will soon make an “institutional
response to [its] recommendations.”
But E.A.
Siddiq, a former deputy general of the Indian Council of
Agricultural Research (ICAR) and now a member of the Board of
International Rice Research Institute in Manila says India would
not lose anything even if ICRISAT were wound up completely. “It
has not done any thing more than ICAR, and its departure [would
be] no loss,” he says. |