Collaboration on Promoting Quinoa (Part 1)

Start date:
15 يونيو, 2020
End date:
15 يونيو, 2020
Venue:

Online webinar

The Global Framework on Water Scarcity in Agriculture (WASAG), hosted by the Land and Water Division of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), is pleased to invite you to join its fifth webinar titled “Collaboration on Promoting Quinoa (Part 1)”.

Quinoa, which has high nutritional content and adaptability to various marginal conditions, has been identified by various organizations such as FAO, the International Center for Biosaline Agriculture (ICBA) and CIRAD as a food crop that can play a vital role in contributing to food and nutrition security globally. And it is part of WASAG’s mandate to provide through a robust network of partners an enabling environment, capacity development and resources to address food and nutrition insecurity, especially in countries facing challenges of water scarcity as well as soil and water salinity.

With the threat of climate change, it is extremely important to cultivate salt- and drought-tolerant crops such as quinoa to enhance climate-smart agriculture. In collaboration with ICBA and CIRAD, WASAG is coordinating international efforts on expanded quinoa production. This webinar will discuss the biodiversity of quinoa and the improvement of germplasm for marginal environments, as well as the emerging opportunities in quinoa production.

REGISTRATION IS OPEN NOW

Moderator: Mr. Remi Nono Womdim, Deputy Director, AGPM, FAO

15:05-15:10 Opening Remarks – Dr. Ismahane Elouafi, Director General, ICBA
15:10-15:20 Characterization and sharing of quinoa's biodiversity: its global spreading beyond its origins – Dr. Didier Bazile, CIRAD
15:20-15:30 Germplasm improvement for the saline and dry marginal environments – Dr. Rakesh Kumar Singh, ICBA
15:30-15:40 Emerging opportunities in quinoa production - Ms. Ndeye Ndack Diop, AGPM, FAO
15:40-15:55 Questions and answers
15:55-16:00 Closing remarks - Ms. Tania Santivanez, REU, FAO

Speakers

Mr. Remi Nono Womdim - Deputy Director, AGPM, FAO

Rémi Nono Womdim is the Deputy Director, Plant Production and Protection Division, FAO, Rome. He has over thirty years of experience in various positions at research, development and management levels in national and international organizations and in the private sector environment in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and Europe. Previously he served as FAO Representative in Cabo Verde, Programme Specialist and Agricultural Officer at AGP in Rome. Prior to joining FAO in 2009, he was Programme Research Manager and Liaison Officer at the World Vegetable Center; Director of Research and Development of an International Seed Company. Earlier in his career, he was Research Associate at the National Agronomic Research Institute in Montfavet, France. He holds a Ph.D. in Life Sciences (Plant Pathology) from the University of Paris XI-Orsay in France.

Dr. Ismahane Elouafi - Director General, ICBA 

She joined ICBA as Director General in 2012. Prior to that, she had held management positions with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. She also worked as a scientist with several international research organizations, including the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS), and International Maize and Wheat Center (CIMMYT). She holds a Ph.D. in Genetics (Cordoba University, Spain) and has a passion for science, its management, and its integration with policy. She believes that science has to be the basis of decisions and development plans in order to achieve efficiency and alleviate discrimination and poverty. She is a recipient of many international awards, including the Excellence in Science award from the Global Thinkers Forum (2014), and the National Reward Medal by His Majesty Mohamed VI, the King of Morocco (2014). In 2014, Muslim Science ranked Dr. Elouafi among the 20 Most Influential Women in Science in the Islamic World under the Shapers category, and the CEO-Middle East Magazine listed her among the World’s 100 Most Powerful Arab Women in the Science category.

Dr. Didier Bazile - Senior Biodiversity Advisor at the French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development (CIRAD) 

Dr. Didier Bazile is a senior scientist based at CIRAD, Montpellier France. Agronomist, Didier is an active researcher in agroecology with a focus on agrobiodiversity and plant genetic resources. He received a Ph.D. in Rural Geography (Toulouse, 1998) and was graduated as Director of Research (HdR) (Montpellier, 2014). After different international experiences (Africa, Asia, South America), he joined the CIRAD in 2001 as Principal Scientist where he develops an ecosystem approach for in situ conservation of biodiversity and promotes participatory research. For the International Year of Quinoa in 2013, Didier coordinated the book called “The state-of-the-art report on quinoa around the world in 2013” published by FAO and Cirad. During 2014-2016, he was invited at FAO-HQ to serve as Visiting Expert and Quinoa International Focal Point. During this time, he gave technical assistance to 31 countries experimenting quinoa worldwide. He is the founder and facilitator of the Global Collaborative Network on Quinoa (gcn-quinoa.org) for sharing experiences among 300 researchers from 75 countries. Today, he serves as Cirad Biodiversity Advisor.

Dr. Rakesh Kumar Singh - Program Leader Crop Diversification and Genetics section and Principal Scientist (Plant Breeding)

RK Singh, a plant breeder by training, currently working as "Program Leader of Crop Diversification and Genetics" section at The International Centre for Biosaline Agriculture (ICBA) based at Dubai. Before joining ICBA, he worked as lead rice breeder for salinity and problem soils at International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) Philippines. He has served as Regional plant breeding coordinator for eastern and southern Africa (Tanzania), Rainfed lowland rice breeder for south East Asia (Philippines) and Principal Scientist in Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) in India. He has vast experience of more than 3 decades on breeding for abiotic stress tolerance in plants and instrumental to develop more than 25 improved crop varieties. 

Ms. Ndeye Ndack Diop - Agricultural officer, AGPM, FAO

Ndeye Ndack Diop is an Agricultural Officer in the Seeds and Plant Genetic Resources Team of the Plant Production and Protection Division, i.e. AGPM, of FAO. She is responsible for the sustainable use of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, which in FAO’s terms means crop varietal development and adoption. Typically, her work involves support to countries in evaluating and enhancing, as applicable, their capacities for plant breeding. Prior to joining FAO 3,5 years ago, she worked in the CGIAR centre, CIMMYT, where she supported the integration of efficiency-enhancing biotechnologies and analytics into national crop improvement programmes. She had also worked in advanced laboratories in the United States and France and in the National Agricultural Research and Extension System of her native Senegal. With a PhD in Plant Physiology, her prior research work spanned the areas of Molecular Biology, Genomics and Molecular Breeding. 

Ms. Tania Santivanez - Agricultural Officer for Europa and Central Asia and Delivery manager of Regional initiative “Natural resources management under a changing climate”, FAO 

Tania Santivañez has a Master’s Degree in Organic Chemistry at the People’s Friendship University in Russia and post Graduate Degrees on Environmental Management Systems, Ecotoxicology and Environmental Defenders Organization and Social Economy and Fair Trade at the Padre Hurtado University in Chile. Tania has been working at FAO for 20 years now and her key area of expertise is Sustainable and Agri-food Systems. For 8 years she acted as Regional agricultural officer for Latin America and the Caribbean, coordinating a Regional program on agrifood system and leading various projects related to sustainable crop production, quinoa food system, seed system, inclusive trade at local and regional level. She was Global Coordinator for the “International year of Quinoa” in 2013, led several projects, initiatives, and contributed to build a global Researchers network to promote quinoa production in the most vulnerable countries. Currently, she is Agriculture Officer with FAO's Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia and responsible for sustainable natural resources management under a changing climate initiative.

تنظيم

FAO/WASAG