Gates, Rockefeller Alliance
Bill & Melinda Gates, Rockefeller Foundations Form Alliance to Help Spur ‘Green Revolution’ in AfricaSeptember 12, 2006
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation announced today that they will form an alliance to contribute to a "Green Revolution" in Africa that will dramatically increase the productivity of small farms, moving tens of millions of people out of extreme poverty and significantly reducing hunger.
This joint effort builds on the work of the Rockefeller Foundation between the 1940s and 1960s to launch what is known as the "Green Revolution," an effort that pioneered the historic transformation of farming methods in Latin America and South and Southeast Asia, helping to double food production and stave off widespread famine. Among the pioneers in this effort was plant pathologist Norman Borlaug, a Rockefeller Foundation scientist for 39 years, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his work developing improved crop varieties and farm management practices and promoting their widespread use around the world.
"The original Green Revolution was a huge success in many parts of the world," said Judith Rodin, president of the Rockefeller Foundation. "Unfortunately, in Africa, while there are many positive efforts, momentum is going the other way. Over the past 15 years, the number of Africans living on less than a dollar a day has increased by 50 percent. Working with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and with African leaders, farmers and scientists, we're committed to launching an African Green Revolution that will help tens of millions of people who are living on the brink of starvation in sub-Saharan Africa."
Over the long term, the partnership, called Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), intends to improve agricultural development in Africa by addressing both farming and relevant economic issues, including soil fertility and irrigation, farmer management practices, and farmer access to markets and financing. Almost three-quarters of Africa's land area is being farmed without improved inputs such as fertilizer and advanced seeds.
"No major region around the world has been able to make sustained economic gains without first making significant improvements in agricultural productivity," said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Gates Foundation. "In Africa today, the great majority of poor people, many of them women with young children, depend on agriculture for food and income and remain impoverished and even go hungry. Yet, Melinda and I also have seen reason for hope - African plant scientists developing higher-yielding crops, African entrepreneurs starting seed companies to reach small farmers, and agrodealers reaching more and more small farmers with improved farm inputs and farm management practices. These strategies have the potential to transform the lives and health of millions of families. Working together with African leaders and the Rockefeller Foundation, we are embarking on a long-term effort focused on agricultural productivity, which will build on and extend this important work."
Recent Press Releases
Rockefeller Foundation/TIME Survey Reveals Americans’ Concern over Finances has Doubled in the Last YearRockefeller Foundation to Provide $2.2 million for New Orleans “Rebuilding” Fellowships
June 18, 2007
Rockefeller Foundation Announces Fund to Spur Cultural Innovation in NYC
June 13, 2007
Mekong Basin Disease Surveillance Network Signs New Memorandum of Agreement at the World Health Assembly
May 15, 2007
City of New Orleans Receives Grants
to Implement Recovery Recommendations
April 24, 2007
NYC Mayor Bloomberg, Delegation Visit
Mexico’s Oportunidades Program
April 24, 2007
Dr. John Rowe Named Rockefeller Foundation Trustee
April 18, 2007
Rockefeller Foundation to Convene Urban Summit
March 19, 2007
Southeast Asian Nations Conduct Joint Exercise in Cambodia to Improve Flu Pandemic Response
March 14, 2007
Nicholas Turner, Leader in Criminal Justice Reform, Joins Rockefeller Foundation as Managing Director
March 14, 2007
Rockefeller Foundation Announces Award to Honor Activist, Author & Urbanist Jane Jacobs
February 12, 2007
Dr. Ariel Pablos-Méndez, leader in global public health, joins Rockefeller Foundation as Managing Director
January 18, 2007
RF, TC to Distribute Curriculum on Spike Lee’s ‘Levees’ Free to 30,000 Classrooms
January 10, 2007
The Rockefeller Foundation to Extend InnoCentive’s On-line, Global Scientific Platform For Technology Solutions to Global Development Problems
December 18, 2006
David Rockefeller, Jr., Ann Fudge and Rajat Gupta to join the Rockefeller Foundation Board of Trustees
October 17, 2006
Rockefeller Foundation Statement on Establishment of Japanese Prize Honoring Dr. Hideyo Noguchi
July 25, 2006
Hideyo Noguchi homepage
Peter Costiglio Named Director of Communications at the Rockefeller Foundation
July 25, 2006
Darren Walker Named Vice President of the Rockefeller Foundation
July 20, 2006
New Orleans’ Southern Rep Theater Among 66 US Artists, Ensembles Whose Projects Receive Grants From Multi-Arts Production Fund
July 18, 2006
Bellagio Dialogue on Migration Concludes Month-long Programming with Amato, Kolbe
July 15, 2006
The Rockefeller Foundation to Provide $3.5 Million to Accelerate Recovery Planning for the City of New Orleans
April 20, 2006
Global Leaders Launch Effort to Turn Around Africa’s Failing Agriculture March 30, 2006
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg to Address New York’s Creative Community at Creative New York Conference
March 23, 2006
The Rockefeller Foundation Commits $3 Million for Housing and Economic Redevelopment in Response to Hurricane Katrina
September 8, 2005