AfDB President Adesina wins World Food Prize 2017

27 Jun 2017
Financial Nigeria

Summary

Adesina said he was inspired by a commitment to transform African agriculture into a means for lifting millions out of poverty and is proud his work has been recognized.

AfDB President Akinwumi Adesina

The World Food Prize 2017 has been awarded to Akinwumi Adesina, President of the African Development Bank Group "for helping Africa get it right in agriculture and making it a key player of securing food for the world.”

The World Food Prize board chose Adesina this year for the $250,000 prize, highlighting his role in improving the availability of seed, fertilizer and financing for African farmers, and for laying the foundations for the youth in Africa to engage in agriculture as a profitable business."

The official announcement of the prize was made during a ceremony Monday at the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington D.C., hosted by its Secretary, Sonny Perdue. “Adesina will receive the $250,000 award administered by the Des Moines-based World Food Prize Foundation in a ceremony at the state Capitol in October,” he said.

The prize was founded by Norman E. Borlaug, a native of northeast Iowa who was awarded the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for his life’s work on feeding the world through the scientific advancements of the Green Revolution.

Perdue commended Adesina for his tireless work in securing food for Africa and the world. He, however, pointed out that there were still huge challenges on the way as the world population grows, raising the challenge of feeding 9 billion people. “Adesina knows that our work is not done,” he said.

Speaking at the event, which brought together key players in the world of bilateral and multilateral development, Adesina said he was inspired by a commitment to transform African agriculture into a means for lifting millions out of poverty and is proud his work has been recognized. “It's vitally important to show young people in rural regions of Africa that farming can be profitable and can improve their lives…”

As Nigeria’s minister of agriculture from 2011 to 2015, he made his mark by creating programmes to make the country self-sufficient in rice production and helped turn cassava into a major cash crop and a strategic raw material for bakeries. Above all, Adesina’s success in enabling Nigeria’s farmers increase farm yields through an electronic wallet system that helped them obtain fertilizers, led to dramatic improvement in agricultural production and enhanced food security for 40 million people in the country’s rural farm households.


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