Basic Research to Enable Agricultural Development
(BREAD)
PI Workshop
Thank you to all who participated in the BREAD PI Workshop on May 1. Please keep checking this site for links to the presentation, Q&As, and webcast video. Workshop documents will be posted as soon as possible.
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SYNOPSIS
Agriculture is benefiting from advances in genomics made over the past decade, including high throughput sequencing methods, bioinformatics, databases, and a wealth of other “omics” technologies. Outcomes of this research have allowed academic and industrial researchers to expand the breeders' toolkit, for example, to exploit the diversity of agronomically useful traits in wild and domesticated crop plants and to accelerate the development of new plant varieties through marker-assisted breeding. There has been some application of these advances to smallholder agriculture in developing countries but there is a lack of resource and technology development that focuses directly on developing country issues and that is tailored to these needs.
New collaborations by a broad range of scientists and engineers are needed that lead to a different way of thinking about the major problems facing developing country agriculture. The National Science Foundation announces a partnership with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to support these collaborations and the transformative research that will emerge. The goal of this new program, “Basic Research to Enable Agricultural Development” or “BREAD”, is to build on the accomplishments of the National Plant Genome Initiative (NPGI), extending the opportunities to include international partners in efforts to generate sustainable, science-based solutions to problems of smallholder agriculture in developing countries. Through these new partnerships and projects, it is anticipated that the program will lead a change in the research culture to one that is more broadly inclusive of these needs.
This program will be a component of the Plant Genome Research Program (PGRP) that began in Fiscal Year 1998 as part of the NPGI. A new five-year plan for the NPGI was released in January 2009 (http://www.ostp.gov/galleries/NSTC/NPGI%20Five-Year%20Plan%202009-2013.pdf). The overall goals of the NPGI are to support basic research in plant genomics and to accelerate the acquisition and utilization of new knowledge and innovative approaches to elucidating fundamental biological processes in plants. The focus of the NPGI is on plants of agricultural importance and plant processes of potential agronomic value.
Since 2004, the PGRP has offered the Developing Country Collaborations in Plant Genome Research (DCC-PGR) funding opportunity (http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=12789&org=BIO) to support research collaborations between US scientists and scientists from developing countries as part of ongoing or new PGRP awards. The intent of the DCC-PGR program is to support collaborative research linking US researchers with partners from developing countries to solve problems of mutual interest in agriculture, energy and the environment, while placing US and international researchers at the center of a global network of scientific excellence.
The BREAD Program will take the activities initiated under PGRP and DCC-PGR to the next level, allowing a broader engagement of researchers across disciplines and across international boundaries to form a new community of scientists who may not have worked together before. The Program is expected to support scientific research that tests innovative hypotheses and that would lead to novel and creative approaches and technologies applicable to smallholder agriculture. Especially encouraged would be new proposals that focus on improving existing agricultural crops, developing new crops, increasing crop productivity, or developing efficient production practices.
Although the program emphasizes crop improvement, it would also consider novel, imaginative, and creative ideas from scientists in all fields of science and engineering as long as the proposed hypothesis is consistent with the program objectives. The focus will be on novel, transformative research at the proof of concept stage rather than development. Proposals would be expected to address anticipated project outcomes in the context of broader societal impacts.
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RELATED PUBLICATIONS
Developing Country Collaborations in Plant Genome Research (Dear Colleague Letter) (NSF 04-563)
RELATED PROGRAMS
Plant Genome Research Program
RELATED URLS
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
National Plant Genome Initiative Five Year Plan (2009-2013)
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
Emerging Technologies to Benefit Farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia (National Academy of Science, 2009)
IFDC - An International Center for Soil Fertility & Agricultural Development
InterAcademy Council - Publications
International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2008 (Food and Agriculture Organization, 2008)
United Nations Millennium Development Goals
World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development (World Bank, 2007)
THIS PROGRAM IS PART OF
Opportunities that Highlight International Collaboration
Plant Genome Research Program
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