Nourishing the Planet

Nourishing the Planet

In July of 2009, the Worldwatch Institute received a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to launch a two-year research project assessing agricultural innovations that nourish people and the planet. Nourishing the Planet will provide policy makers, farmers and donors with research on practical and sustainable solutions for alleviating hunger and poverty around the globe.

The project will culminate in the Worldwatch Institute’s flagship publication, State of the World 2011: Innovations that Nourish the Planet. The 27th edition of State of the World will be accompanied by online resources sharing information about agricultural innovations that have been proven to improve livelihoods and reduce hunger. Danielle Nierenberg, co-director of Nourishing the Planet, spent a year traveling to over 25 countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa, meeting and interviewing over 200 projects and individuals with different non-profits and farmers groups collecting information on sustainable agriculture innovations that are improving to food security.

State of the World 2011 launched on January 12th in New York City at WNYC Radio's The Greene Space, with a global teleconference call. The 15th annual State of the World Symposium 2011 took place a week later on January 19th in Washington DC at the Carnegie International Center for Peace. The book has also been successfully launched in Ahmedabad and Delhi in India, Helsinki in Finland, and Copenhagen Denmark, and will soon launch in Berlin and Hamburg in Germany, Rome, Bologna, and Turin in Italy and Barcelona in Spain.

The Nourishing the Planet blog (www.nourishingtheplanet.org) now has components in French, Spanish, and Portuguese. The blog features a weekly innovations series, interviews with food and agriculture experts from around the globe and a comprehensive listing of press clips from international newspapers and magazines that have featured the project. Danielle and the Nourishing the Planet project's research has been highlighted in publications such as the New York Times, Mail & Guardian, Vancouver Sun, The Korea Herald, the Christian Science Monitor, the Seattle Times, USA Today, AllAfrica, and many more.

Partner organizations include World Neighbors, Ecoagriculture Partners, Heifer International, Rodale Institute, Slow Food International, International Fund for Agricultural Development and the Global Water Policy Project.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Norman Uphoff — (born 1941) is an American social scientist serving as a Professor of Government and International Agriculture at Cornell University. He is the Acting Director of the Cornell Institute of Public Administration and the former director of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Christopher Flavin — (left) 2010 Christopher Flavin is the President of the Worldwatch Institute, an independent research organization focused on natural resource and environmental issues, based in Washington, DC. He is also a founding member of the Board of… …   Wikipedia

  • Worldwatch Institute — Das Worldwatch Institute (WI) wurde 1974 von Lester R. Brown gegründet. Das Institut in der US amerikanischen Hauptstadt Washington ist eine unabhängige interdisziplinäre Forschungseinrichtung mit Konzentration auf Themen der Nachhaltigkeit sowie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • List of melons — Melon redirects here. For other uses, see Melon (disambiguation). Various types of melons This list of melons includes members of the plant family Cucurbitaceae with edible, fleshy fruit e.g. gourds or cucurbits. The word melon can refer to… …   Wikipedia

  • Ishtarians — The Ishtarians are a fictional sentient race of extraterrestrials who evolved on the planet of Ishtar in Poul Anderson s novel, Fire Time.PhysiologyThe body plan is generally centauroid, but much more leonine than equine in appearance. The arms… …   Wikipedia

  • Ethereal being — Water nymph by John Collier, 1923. Ethereal beings, according to some belief systems and occult theories, are mystic entities that usually are not made of ordinary matter. Despite the fact that they are believed to be essentially incorporeal,… …   Wikipedia

  • Darwin IV — is a fictional planet that was the subject of Wayne Barlowe s book Expedition and the television special, Alien Planet, based on Expedition. Although the details of the discovery and exploration of Darwin IV differ in the two presentations, both… …   Wikipedia

  • Natural History of an Alien — Format Speculative fiction/Sci Fi Starring Various astronomers and scientists Country of origin …   Wikipedia

  • Arcology — This article is about self contained habitations. For the study of buried human past, see Archaeology. The Shimizu Mega City Pyramid hyperstructure or megacity as featured on the Discovery Channel s Extreme Engineering programs Arcology, a… …   Wikipedia

  • John D. Hamaker — (1914–1994), was an American mechanical engineer, ecologist, agronomist and science writer in the fields of soil remineralization, rock dusting, mineral cycles, climate cycles and glaciology. Contents 1 Biography 2 Discoveries inventions 3… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”