June 29, 2010 – MUSCLE SHOALS, Ala. – The inaugural meeting of the Board of Advisors of the Virtual Fertilizer Research Center (VFRC) was held at the World Bank in Washington, D.C. The 13-member board represents a broad spectrum of prominent international leaders in the public and private sectors who are experts in the fields of agriculture, fertilizer, food security, sustainable development, soil science and international philanthropy.

During the meeting the advisors strongly endorsed the Center and its mission to oversee the creation of the next generation of fertilizers and production technologies to help avert world hunger, and pledged their individual and collective efforts to make it successful. The VFRC is a global research initiative organized by IFDC, an international public organization that focuses on increasing and sustaining food security and agricultural productivity in developing countries through the development and transfer of effective and environmentally sound crop nutrient technology and agribusiness expertise. Initial financial support for the VFRC was provided by the United States Agency for International Development; additional funding sources will be sought going forward.

New and improved fertilizers are critical elements in the effort to help feed the world’s growing population, provide sustainable global food security and protect the environment. Dr. Jimmy Cheek,
chancellor of the University of Tennessee (USA) and chairman of the VFRC Board of Advisors, began the meeting by stating, “The need for new and innovative research is a global issue and thus requires a global solution. The VFRC will focus on the development of a new suite of crop nutrients that will revolutionize agriculture in the developing world. Participating individuals and institutions can and will be located literally anywhere on the globe; will be linked in a virtual manner through the Internet and other communications tools.”

According to Dr. Amit H. Roy, IFDC president and CEO, “IFDC created the VFRC to be the most rapid, economical way to tap the world’s intellectual capacity to generate this critically needed fertilizer research.” He added, “The Center will partner with universities, public and private research laboratories and the global fertilizer and agribusiness industries to bring together the best scientific, business and government minds to create a research system producing more food with fewer wasted resources and a reduced environmental impact.”

With severe population, economic and environmental issues looming over the next 40 years, the VFRC board is unanimous in its view that the world cannot afford the current level of inefficiency in fertilizer production and use. It is estimated that 40-50 percent of the food consumed worldwide is grown with the aid of nitrogen fertilizers. Yet, only about one-third of the nitrogen fertilizer applied to crops in developing countries is utilized due to inefficiencies in application methods and the inherent properties of current fertilizer products. Poor farmers are burdened, paying for three times as many nutrients as their crops absorb. Moreover, the unused fertilizer often becomes an environmental pollutant, either in the form of greenhouse gas or runoff that fouls streams, lakes and oceans.

The production of one ton of urea, the predominant nitrogen fertilizer product, requires the energy equivalent of four barrels of oil. At the same time, inefficiencies in production and use result in less than 30 percent of the phosphate mined to produce phosphorus fertilizer ever becoming a part of the food chain. Yet, over the past 25 years, no “new” efficient fertilizer product has been developed – particularly no product affordable for use on food crops by farmers in less developed countries.

The world food supply has managed to stay ahead of rising population due to increasing productivity and a modest expansion of cultivated area. However, non-renewable resource reserves (such as phosphates and potash), increasing energy costs and the growing cost to the environment when bringing more land under cultivation pose new challenges. Fertilizer research and development can make a major contribution in addressing these challenges faced by the developing – and developed – nations.

Going forward, global food security will depend on a focused effort to improve soil fertility and increase productivity of food crops, and fertilizer plays a major role. The production and use of current fertilizer products must be improved. Recent advances in nanotechnology and biotechnology open new opportunities for collaborative research between the public and private sectors.

In their two-day meeting, the Board of Advisors agreed that the VFRC’s focus would be: improve efficiency throughout the agricultural value chain, and in a manner that reduces costs for smallholder farmers; ensure that new products and methods are adopted as quickly as possible; consider the value proposition for new products to demonstrate the return on investment to each part of the value chain; seek potential offsets from new, higher efficiency products; concentrate on technologies that make more efficient use of water and are better for the environment; and consider alliances with both upstream and downstream industries in agriculture.

IFDC was founded in 1974 as a center of excellence and expertise in fertilizers to serve the needs of developing countries. It is an outgrowth of the National Fertilizer Development Center (NFDC) of the Tennessee Valley Authority. The majority of fertilizers in use worldwide were developed by the NFDC and/or IFDC. While the NFDC and IFDC employed more than 1,500 scientists at one location, the VFRC will coordinate the work of scientists located worldwide. This virtual network will build on the work of the NFDC and IFDC.

[See below for a list of the VFRC board members and their current affiliations]

VFRC Board of Advisors

Dr. Jimmy G. Cheek
Chairman of the VFRC Board of Advisors
Chancellor
University of Tennessee
United States

Dr. Marco Ferroni
Executive Director
Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture
Switzerland

Mark Huisenga
Agriculture Programs Advisor
U.S. Agency for International Development
United States

Assétou Kanouté
Research and Teaching Assistant
Polytechnic Institute for Rural and Applied Research
University of Mali
Mali

Luc Maene
Director General
International Fertilizer Industry Association
France

M. Peter McPherson
President
Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities
United States

Honorable Prof. Ruth Oniang’o
Founder and Editor-in-Chief
African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development
Founder and Leader
Rural Outreach Programme
Kenya

Dr. Roelof (Rudy) Rabbinge
University Professor in Sustainable Development and Food Security
Wageningen University
Netherlands

Dr. Renfang Shen
Director General
Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Director
State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture
China

Dr. A.K. Singh
Deputy Director General
Natural Resource Management Division
Indian Council of Agricultural Research
India

Ajay Vashee
President
International Federation of Agricultural Producers
Zambia

Dr. Juergen Voegele
Director
Agriculture and Rural Development
World Bank
United States

Dr. Prem Warrior
Senior Program Officer
Agricultural Development Group (Science and Technology Team)
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
United States

Areas of Expertise:
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