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Gerda Verburg, the agriculture secretary from the Netherlands, said agriculture is crucial to conservation and sustainable use of natural resources. In many countries, it's also a primary form of economic development and helps reduce poverty, she said. Referring to the so-called "green revolution," in which high-yield, disease-resistant crop varieties helped more than double world food production between 1960 and 1990, she said another is needed "in the most literal meaning of the word. "This means a revolution of ideas, a revolution of technologies and a revolution in agricultural and trade policies ... as well as providing the financial means," Verburg said. "If we want a second green revolution we need to modernize agriculture by combining the best farm knowledge with the best ... science as well as promoting good land and water stewardship," she said. The World Food Prize and the annual conference where it is awarded was founded by Nobel Peace Prize winner Norman Borlaug, a crop scientist known as the father of the green revolution. Ethiopian scientist Gebisa Ejeta, now a professor at Purdue University, will be honored as this year's recipient of the $250,000 World Food Prize on Thursday. Ejeta will be recognized for his breakthroughs in developing a drought-resistant sorghum widely used in Africa.
[Associated
Press;
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