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Corporate Social Responsibility
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6.04.2008 - 11:54am ET
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Monsanto Will Undertake Three-Point Commitment to Double Yield in Three Major Crops, Make More Efficient Use of Natural Resources and Improve Farmer Lives
Will Also Fund Public Sector Research for Wheat and Rice Breakthroughs
(CSRwire) ST. LOUIS, June 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Monsanto Company today
announced a three-point commitment to help increase global food production
in the face of growing demand, limited natural resources and a changing
climate. It pledged to work in new partnerships with other businesses,
citizen groups and governments to meet one of the greatest challenges of
the 21st century.
"Agriculture intersects the toughest challenges we all face on the
planet," said Hugh Grant, chairman, president and chief executive officer
of Monsanto, in announcing the commitment to help address the needs of a
global population expected to reach nine billion people by 2050.
"Together, we must meet the needs for increased food, fiber and energy
while protecting the environment. In short, the world needs to produce
more while conserving more."
"As an agricultural company focused on increasing crop yields, we will
do our part," he said. "But it will also require the efforts of a diverse
group of organizations with many points of view to work together and take
action to address the daunting challenges facing us all."
Monsanto's three-point commitment to growing yields sustainably
includes:
- Develop better seeds - Monsanto will double yield in its three
core crops of corn, soybeans and cotton by 2030, compared to a base year
of 2000.The company will also establish a $10 million grant designed to
accelerate breakthrough public sector research in wheat and rice yield.
- Conserve resources - Monsanto will develop seeds that will reduce
by one-third the amount of key resources required to grow crops by the
year 2030. The company will also join with others to address habitat loss
and water quality in agriculturally important areas.
- Help improve farmers' lives - The company will help improve the
lives of farmers, including an additional five million people in
resource-poor farm families by 2020.
"We're undertaking this initiative after engaging many of our farmer
customers, policymakers, scientists, non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
and experts in academia and industry. We asked them what agriculture must
do to become more sustainable, and our commitment reflects how we will put
their advice into action," Grant said.
In discussing the challenges faced by agriculture, Grant noted that
the world faces significant food price inflation for the first time in
decades, driven largely by the demand for higher-protein diets in such
countries as China and India and energy prices that have quadrupled over
the past five years. Experts say it will be necessary to produce as much
food between now and 2050 as has been produced in the last 10,000 years.
As agriculture uses 70 percent of the world's fresh water and more than
half of the habitable land, much of the production increase must come from
increased crop yields.
Concern over climate change has also increased, with experts noting
that the eight warmest years on record have all occurred in the last
decade.
Grant said the quality of life for the world's one billion farmers is
an important part of this equation. This includes both commercial farmers
and the tens of millions of resource-poor farmers who survive on less than
$2 per day.
Grant said Monsanto spends an average of more than $2 million a day on
agricultural research. Yet he noted that partnerships with others are
essential to developing and delivering approaches to these global
challenges.
Examples of what Monsanto will undertake to achieve its three-point
commitment include the following:
Develop better seeds
Monsanto's research program centers on increasing yields for three key
crops used for food, feed, fiber and fuel - corn, soybeans and cotton. The
company's research pipeline uses more precise breeding techniques to
develop higher-yielding germplasm. Other technologies result in plant
traits that provide better protection against pests and better weed
control. Monsanto's objective under this new commitment is to double yield
for these three crops by 2030 in countries where farmers have access to
current and anticipated new seed choices offered by the company.
This would mean, for example, that corn production in the prominent
agricultural markets of Argentina, Brazil and the United States would
reach a weighted average of 220 bushels per acre by 2030, compared to
109.1 bushels per acre in 2000. Soybean production in those countries
would rise from a weighted average of 39.5 bushels per acre in 2000 to 79
bushels per acre in 2030. Cotton would increase from 1.4 bales (672
pounds) per acre to 2.8 bales (1,344 pounds) per acre.
Monsanto will establish a five-year, $10 million grant for rice and
wheat research to be administered by a panel of world experts on food
production in developing countries. Rice and wheat are key crops for food
security, but are not a primary focus for the company. The chairperson of
this panel will be named in the near future. A panel of independent judges
will select one project per year to receive a $2 million grant. Further
details on this program will be developed and announced in the coming
months.
Conserve resources
Monsanto's research pipeline includes new corn, soybeans and cotton
products that will result in more production per unit of land, and reduced
use of energy, fertilizer and water per unit produced. Monsanto will track
the progress of its products toward the goal of reducing by one-third the
cumulative amount of key resources like land, water and energy required
per unit of output.
Monsanto will also undertake a series of partnerships that will
address key environmental issues associated with agriculture.
Help improve farmers'lives
The third element in Monsanto's commitment is to improve the lives of
farmers, including smallholder and resource-poor farmers. Part of this
commitment is offering products that increase productivity and reduce the
risks of farming, such as fewer inputs to manage insects, weeds and other
yield-robbing stresses.
The availability of these new commercial products can help. In India,
for example, the use of insect-protected cotton increased yields by more
than 50 percent and profits to farmers by more than US$250 per hectare,
according to third-party studies.
In special circumstances for resource-poor farmers, Monsanto also is
committed to sharing its expertise in a way that gives them access to
modern agricultural technology.
For example, one of the first of these projects was announced in
March, a collaboration with the African Agricultural Technology Foundation
(AATF), the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) and
Monsanto to develop drought-tolerant maize for Africa that will be made
available to farmers royalty-free.
The AATF is leading this project in which Monsanto and CIMMYT are
donating unique germplasm and technology expertise. In addition, Monsanto
is contributing breeding tools and the same water-use efficiency genes
being developed for commercial global markets. The Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation and the Howard G. Buffett Foundation are providing funding for
product testing and development in Africa. Government researchers from
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and South Africa are also playing a key role in
this public-private partnership called Water Efficient Maize for Africa
(WEMA). Among other partnerships, Monsanto will also work with public
institutions to develop products for non-commercial crops that are
important in some world areas, including cassava, cowpea and papaya.
"These commitments represent the beginning of a journey that we will
expand on and deepen in the years ahead. We will report on our progress as
we engage our entire organization in this effort," Grant said.
Monsanto Company (NYSE: MON) is a leading global provider of
technology-based solutions and agricultural products that improve farm
productivity and food quality. For more information on Monsanto, see: http://www.monsanto.com.
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