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Issue 19: September 2002

Norman E. Borlaug
Famed wheat researcher to
deliver U Thant lecture

The scientist credited with saving more lives than any other person in history will deliver the fourth U Thant Distinguished Lecture at UNU Centre, Tokyo, on October 1. Dr Norman E. Borlaug, who won the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize winner for his work on high-yield wheat, will discuss "Agriculture and Peace: The Role of Science and Technology in Feeding Humankind in the 21st Century."

Dr. Borlaug joined the Rockefeller Foundation's technical assistance programme in Mexico in 1944 as a research scientist in charge of wheat improvement. For the next 16 years, he worked to solve problems that were limiting wheat cultivation. It was on the research stations and farmers' fields of Mexico that he developed high yielding wheat varieties that were disease resistant and could grow under a variety of climatic conditions. These wheat types and improved crop management practices became known the “Green Revolution”.

Today, the wheat varieties Dr. Borlaug and his colleagues developed are grown on more than 75 million hectares worldwide. Since 1960, world wheat production has increased from 300 to 650 million tons, saving hundreds of millions of people from starvation.

Dr. Borlaug has been honored by scores of governments, universities, scientific associations, farmers' groups and civic associations. He holds 50 honorary doctorate degrees, belongs to the academies of science in 12 nations, has served on two US Presidential Commissions and was the driving force behind the establishment of the World Food Prize in 1985. As leader of the Sasakawa Global 2000 agricultural program in sub-Saharan Africa, he has worked with several million farmers in 15 countries of sub-Saharan Africa to increase food production.

The U Thant Distinguished Lecture Series, named after the former UN Secretary–General, was created to provide a forum for dialogue among the world’s greatest thinkers, addressing the twenty–first century’s most pressing issues. Previous speakers include former US president Bill Clinton and South African President Thabo Mbeki.

Members of the public are welcome to attend Dr. Borlaug's lecture, which starts at 10:30 am in the UN University’s U Thant International Conference Hall.

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