From left: government delegates, co-chairs Hans Herren and Judy Wakungu, UNEP Director Achim Steiner and IAASTD Director Bob Watson; dancing after adoption; Right: The IAASTD turtle, who started it's long walk in 2004 in Nairobi, coming down the home stretch
>>How can we reduce hunger and poverty, improve rural livelihoods, and facilitate equitable, environmentally, socially and economically sustainable development through the generation, access to, and use of agricultural knowledge, science and technology? <<
Internal NGO website on the "International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development"

Final IAASTD plenary in Johannesburg calls for new agricultural revolution
Representatives of 60 governments, the Worldbank and all UN Agencies, as well as about 50 NGOs were meeting 6 to 12 April 2008 in Johannesburg for the final intergovernmental plenary of the IAASTD to find consensus on the international and 5 subregional assessments. On Friday 11th governments concluded their line by line approval of the Summaries for Decisionmakers and of a Synthesis Report and accepted the underlying 2000 pages of scientific evidence in the assessment reports.

Joint press statement of participating NGOs : A new era of agriculture begins today      pdf version     Deutsch
Greenpeace International press release 15 April 2008   Pesticide Action Network media advisory, website, background material
NGO contacts on IAASTD are here
Pictures of low quality for those who attended are available here
A News Digest is here

Official press releases and a media advisory are available at the official website of the IAASTD
Summaries of the adopted documents are available at greenfacts
The full reports and summaries can be downloaded from the IAASTD website. The best overview is probably the International Synthesis Report.

Five page briefing and overview with quotes (from Greenpeace)

Useful background information


News:

Via Google News: World news (English) on IAASTD     Deutsche Nachrichten zum IAASTD     La presse sur IAASTD     la prensa sobre IAASTD

16 April 2008:

New York Times: U.N. Panel Urges Changes to Feed Poor While Saving Environment
Germany: Deutsches Umweltministerium begrüßt Bericht des Weltagrarrates

15 April 2008:
Reuters: Free food trade threatens environment, poor: report
Al Jazeera, Video: Rethinking food crisis solutions
Guardian: UN body urges agriculture reforms to stave off food crisis
Inter Press Service: Reinventing Agriculture
The EastAfrican: UN scientists say industrial agriculture has failed
Agence France Press: Farm practices must change to counter high food prices
Inquirer Philippines: World must reform agriculture now or face dire crisis
Le Monde: Des experts appellent à repenser l'agriculture de demain
Der Spiegel: Experten fordern radikale Umkehr der Agrarpolitik
BBC: Global food system 'must change'

African Energy News Review, 13. April 2008: UN biofuel warning, call for return to traditional farming

Farmers Guardian UK, 11. April 2008: Report into global food production may draw flak from both sides of GM debate

Inter Press Service, 9 April: "A Collective Ignorance About How Agriculture Interacts With Natural Systems" Interview with UNEP Director Achim Steiner

The Hindu, 9 April 2008: Agri-practices failed to alleviate food situation: UN report

Trading Markets: 8 April 2008: Agri-Practices Failed To Alleviate Food Situation: Un Report

UN News Centre, 7 April 2008: Agriculture must revert to more natural, local production – UN-backed report

The Bioscience Resource Project, 7. April: How the Science Media Failed the IAASTD

Inter Press Service, 6 april 2008: Towards a New and Improved Green Revolution

Op ed by Hans Herren, co-chair: Investing in Sustenance

Op ed by Jan van Aken, Greenpeace: Defining the Future of Agriculture

New Scientist, 5 April 2008:
Andy Coghlan (editor): How to kickstart an agricultural revolution
Comment by Deborah Keith (Syngenta): Why I had to walk out
Comment by Janice Jiggins: Bridging gulfs to feed the world

Science, 14 March 2008: Duelling visions for a hungry world
AAAS 16. Feburary 2008: Bob Watson gets AAAS award

German: Die Zeit 04. April 2008:Das Weltsättigungsprojekt

Third World Network: IAASTD draft proposes significant changes to status quo

January 2008: Monsanto, Syngenta withdraw from IAASTD
Claiming that the final report of the IAASTD was "unbalanced" and not sufficiently supportive of the use of genetic engineering in agriculture two major Agro-chemical and biotech companies Monsanto and Syngenta have withdrawn from the process. It appears that they did not like the results and findings of the about 4000 scientsts involved and prefer to ignore the advice of the lead scientists, which they have jointly selected with governments and non governmental organisations three years ago.
Guardian, 22 January: Biotech companies desert international agriculture project
Nature 17 January 2008, Editorial: Deserting the hungry? Monsanto and Syngenta are wrong to withdraw from an international assessment on agriculture.

December 2007: Watson interviews on key issues of IAASTD on you tube

The World Bank's World Development Report 2008 - Focus on agriculture
On October 19th the World Bank officially released the final version of its "World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development" with a focus on agriculture. In clear contrast to the present drafts of the IAASTD this report promotes top-down approaches, increased world trade in agricultural goods and "modernisiation" of agriculture at the expense of small and subsistence farmers. The present draft contains a highly ideological praise of genetic engineering (Chapter 7 Innovating through science and technology). At this point the World Bank seems deeply concerned about a quite different view to be presented in a report, which has higher credibility and is based upon more inclusiveness and scientific evidence. The final text of the WDR and some background is available on the World Banks website

What is the IAASTD?
A United Nations process to identify the best available and newly needed science, technology and knowledge to answer the question above. Initiated by the World Bank in Johannesburg in 2002 this process started with regional consultations in eleven regions of the world and was endorsed by a Steering Committee of 40 representatives of governments and civil society in 2003. Since then more than 300 scientists and experts have produced a global and five sub-regional assessments which have been reviewed in two rounds. The process is overseen by a multi-stakeholder Bureau from governments and civil society. After the final round of public reviews the Assessment will be adopted by participating governments in January 2008 in Nairobi.
IAASTD 2003 - 2007 Concept, options, key findings, where we are, how to get involved a summary and overview by Teopista, Kevin Akoyi (Vredeseilanden), October 2007
download same document as powerpoint presentation

All about the IAASTD on three pages     Presentation on the IAASTD by Director Robert T. Watson  (2006)

Structure                                 go to top 
The process is a UN multi governmental process, which means the participating member states representatives make the final decisions and adopt the final report. A multi-stakeholder Bureau of 60 persons representing governments (30), civil society (22) and international institutions (8) has been set up to oversee the process. The Bureau elects 2 chairpersons and a Secretariat, controls the budget and agrees upon the selection of experts and authors, facilitates the public outreach and capacity building. The Chairpersons with the support of the Secretariat will facilitate and organise the process.
Members of the Bureau      
Terms of Reference for IAASTD Bureau      Budget      List of Donors
Principles and Procedures of the IAASTD process

Outline of the Global assessment Outline of SSA Assessment Outline of CWANA Assessment Outline of ESAP Assessment Outline of NAE Assessment
Outline of LAC Assessment

Past Meetings:

2007

2nd public review of the Assessment
Drafts of the International and subregional Assessments as well as the first draft of the summary for decision makers (the document that will be formally voted upon by the participating governments) were available for review until May 31 2007. They were substantially improved as compared to their first versions.

Meeting of the Bureau in Washington D.C. 29 - 31. May 2007
decisions of the bureau

2006

Meeting of the Bureau in Costa Rica 1 - 4 November 2006
decisions of the bureau      presentation of the Secretariat on the state of the development at the IAAST Burea Meeeting   

First review of the Assessment
The first draft was open for review and comments until September 2006 and is now being re-written by the authors. A second draft will be online in March 2007.

2005

IAASTD Bureau Meeting in Montpellier
At its last meeting in Montpellier the Bureau of the IAASTD adopted the outlines of the global and sub-regional assessments. The revised global and remaining sub-regional outlines, the minutes of the Bureau meeting, revised rules and procedures, timeline and budget are published at the official web-site at www.agassessment.org.
List of approved decisions of the Bureau            picture of participants     high resolution (big)

18 - 22 July Scenarios Workshop Rome, Italy
Presentation of Mark Rosegrant, IFPRI: Scenario development for IAASTD
Presentation of Monica Zurek and Prabhu Pingali: The Global Scenarios of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment

23-25 May Integrated (Global and Sub-Global) design team, Montpellier, France
25-27 May Bureau meeting, Montpellier, France
Minutes, decisions, revised budget, revised global and sub-regional outlines, timetable

27-29 April Sub-global design team Latin America and the Caribbean, San Jose,
Outline of LAC Assessment

14-16 April Sub-global design team North America/Europe, London, UK
Outline of NAE Assessment

9-12 April, Sub-global design team East/South Asia and the Pacific, Beijing, China
Outline of ESAP Assessment

4-6 April Sub-global design team Sub-Saharan Africa, Nairobi, Kenya
Outline of SSA Assessment (available soon)

8-11 February Central and West Asia and North Africa, Rabat, Morocco.
Outline of CWANA Assessment

30 January - 3 February, Global Design Team, Bangkok, Thailand
92 specialists participated in the meeting in Bangkok. A draft annotated chapter outline was developed -- this draft will be available later this month for comments after review by the Bangkok team.
Outline and annotated Chapters of the Global assessment

2004

Kick-off in Nairobi
The first meeting of the parties (governments), the 5 co-sponsoring UN agencies and the World Bank as well as civil society representatives took place at the UNEP headquarter in Nairobi from August 30 to September 3rd 2004. The government representatives (45 countries present) decided to go ahead with the Assessment. They agreed on the content and scope of the Assessment and adopted outlines and procedures, a time-table and a baseline-budget of US$ 10,7 Mio. A Bureau consisting of 30 government representatives, 22 representatives of civil society and 8 representatives of international institutions was established to oversee the process. The two co-chairs identified by the Bureau will be Hans Herren and Professor Judi Wakhungu, the Director of the Secretariat is Robert Watson.
Minutes of the Nairobi Plenary 30. August - 3rd September

2003                              go to top 
A
Steering Committee of 40 representatives from governments, agencies, industry, farmers and other rural producers, consumers, environmental and other NGO's produced a basic document calling for the International Assessment.
Final Report of the Steering Committee for the Consultative Process on Agricultural Science and Technology (12 August 2003):
English  Arabic   Chinese   Spanish   French   Russian
Short report on the final outcome by Benny Haerlin (August 2003)  
Reuters: Green Light for Global Study on Food Security (August 2003)

Contacts and addresses to NGO representatives and Bureau Members                                 go to top 

Kevin Akoyi, (IAASTD CSO Bureau Member from Uganda)
Vredeseilanden, Email: kevinakoyim[at]yahoo.co.uk

Benny Haerlin ((IAASTD CSO Bureau Member from Germany)
Greenpeace Intl., Email: haerlin[at]zs-l.de, Phone: + 49 173 9997555

Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, PhD (Lead Author, Global Report)
Pesticide Action Network North America (in US)
Email: mie[at]panna.org, Office: +1-415-981-1771, Home: 1-510-981-9721, Mobile: 1-510-684-6860

Lim Li Ching (Lead Author, Asia report; note surname Lim)
Third World Network, Email: limliching[at]myjaring.net, mobile: +6012 2079744

Romeo Quijano, MD (IAASTD CSO Bureau member)
PAN Philippines, Email: romyquij[at]yahoo.com, mobile: +63-9-27-602-4947

Erika Rosenthal, LLD (Lead Author, Global & Synthesis Report; Trade Theme)
Email: erosenthal[at]igc.org, Office: +1-202-742-5846, Mobile +1-415-812-2055.
April 14-16 in London: +44-20-7839-9333

Patrick Mulvany (IAASTD CSO Bureau Member)
Practical Action, Email: patrickmulvany[at]clara.co.uk, Mobile +44 7949 575711

Juan Lopez Friends of the Earth International
Email: juanlopezvillar[at]gmail.com, Phone (Maputo): +258842420298

Jan Van Aken , Greenpeace Intl.
Email: jan.vanaken[at]int.greenpeace.org, Phone: +49 40 306 18-389, Mobile: +49 151 1805 3415

SPANISH-Speaking:
Luis Gomero (Lead Author, Latin America Regional report)
RAAA, Peru, Email: lgomero[at]raaa.org, Tel: (51-1) 4257955