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			International Congress addresses global challenges of postharvest 
			loss 
  
			
   
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            [October 29, 2015]  
			URBANA - The best and the brightest 
			minds from around the world came together this month at the First 
			International Congress on Postharvest Loss Prevention in Rome, 
			Italy. More than 260 people from 62 countries attended the congress, 
			where experts from the fields of technology, research, education, 
			and outreach met with representatives from government, private 
			industry, and international and nongovernmental organizations to 
			discuss postharvest loss (PHL) reduction.  
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				 The Congress was co-organized by the ADM Institute for the 
				Prevention of Postharvest Loss (ADMI) at the University of 
				Illinois, and the Rockefeller Foundation. 
				 
				“This congress was our first-ever attempt to bring all the 
				players who really care about postharvest loss reduction to the 
				same table,” said Prasanta Kalita, director of ADMI and a 
				professor of agricultural and biological engineering at 
				Illinois. “It was a tremendous success. The keynote speakers, 
				the formal presentations, and the informal discussions gave us a 
				clear understanding of global postharvest loss issues and how we 
				can address them to help mitigate global hunger. I think we also 
				saw a new level of communication develop among scientists, 
				governmental policy makers, industry, and philanthropic 
				organizations.” 
              
                
				  
              
				Speakers from Illinois at the opening session included Kalita; 
				President Emeritus Robert Easter; Pradeep Khanna, associate 
				chancellor for corporate and international relations; and Robert 
				Hauser, dean of the College of Agricultural, Consumer and 
				Environmental Sciences (ACES). Interim Chancellor Barbara Wilson 
				welcomed the audience with a video message. 
				 
				More than 30 Illinois faculty and staff members attended the 
				congress, along with eight students from the College of ACES. 
				The students were funded by generous gifts from the Illinois 
				Campus Honors Program, ADMI, the ACES Office of Academic 
				Programs, and the ACES Department of Agricultural and Biological 
				Engineering. 
				 
				Other distinguished speakers at the opening session included 
				Joseph Taets, president of ADM Agricultural Services business 
				unit and president, Europe; Daniel Gustafson, deputy director 
				general of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the 
				United Nations; Judith Rodin, president of the Rockefeller 
				Foundation; and Ertharin Cousin, executive director of World 
				Food Programme.  
              
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			Other noteworthy speakers included C.D. Glin from the Rockefeller 
			Foundation, Mark von Pentz with Deere and Company, Charlene McKoin 
			from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Michael Scuse, USDA. 
			Sessions at the congress covered topics such as PHL status, 
			assessment methods and metrics of PHL measurement, intervention 
			strategies for PHL mitigation, and case studies in PHL prevention. 
			 
			ACES Dean Robert Hauser said, “This congress established the 
			university, the College of ACES, and ADMI as leaders in the area of 
			postharvest loss prevention. I was proud to be associated with it.” 
			 
			Top-level sponsors included the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, 
			Deere and Company, the College of ACES at the University of 
			Illinois, the SaveFood initiative, and USAID Feed the Future. 
			[Leanne Lucas, News and Public 
			Affairs, University of Illinois, College of ACES] 
			  
			
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