04 JOINT MESSAGE FROM THE
CHAIRMAN AND EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR
06 OUR YEAR
08 OUR LOCATIONS
09 OUR PRINCIPAL PARTNERS
10 MALI, PRECAD
10 KENYA, IRMA
12 SYNGENTA FOUNDATION INDIA:
GETTING VEGETABLES TO MARKET
12 ENHANCING THE CAREERS OF EAST
AFRICAN WOMEN SCIENTISTS
14 Brazil, PDHC/Elo
14 Uganda, FICOM
16 east Africa, ASPIRE
18 BIOCARBON FUND
18 IMPROVING ACCESS TO
TECHNOLOGY:
PLANT RESEARCH
20 India, GARDENS FOR LIFE
20 CGIAR’S GENERATION
CHALLENGE PROGRAM
22 The Board
23 STAFF and delegates
24 FURTHER READING

Review 2007
Syngenta foundation for sustainable agriculture


Another SFSA grant to ICRISAT is developing marker-assisted selection options for resistance to downy mildew disease in pearl millet, improved stay-green (drought tolerance) in sorghum, and increased resistance to Striga in sorghum. The programme is working in its ‘proof of concept’ phase on millet with Lake Chad Research Institute in Nigeria, and with the Ethiopian Institute of Agricultural Research, Melkassa Research Station on sorghum. A newly appointed Technology Coordinator, Kassa Semagn, based at the Biosciences for East and Central Africa (BecA) facility on the International Livestock Research Institute campus in Nairobi, will provide scientific support to the molecular marker breeding programmes.

In Eritrea, where we support a programme with the Ministry of Agriculture for the breeding and distribution of millet, farmers are seeing yields of 30 to 40 per cent more grain. We are finding, however, that the farmers need not only high yielding varieties but also crops that have long enough stalks to supply thatch for their roofs and fodder for their cattle, so research is taking those qualities into consideration as well.

Gardens for Life (GFL) – an international initiative run under the direction of the Eden Project in the UK – is bringing the joy of gardening and education about the origins of food to thousands of school children in India, Kenya and England. In India, in partnership with the Centre for Development Education, SFSA has funded the involvement of children from 20 schools in Mumbai and Pune. They have very little green space available, and so instead must grow vegetables in pots, old tyres and available small areas such as rooftops. The schools now have grown 10 to 12 varieties of vegetables, including tomatoes, aubergines and okra.

The students have also exchanged experiences and learning resources with schools in England (Bristol, Cornwall and Gloucestershire) and in the Rift Valley of Kenya, and have used the project as a prompt for debating on topical food issues. At a school in Mumbai, for example, students and teachers discovered that after four months of trying to grow vegetables without success, the plants were failing due to pollution from vehicle exhaust. They moved the location of the garden and set up a campaign against vehicle pollution, which made national headlines.

SFSA is also a member of the GFL steering committee, led by Eden, with the UK’s Department for International Development, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Association for Science Education, UK Department for Education and Skills and the Royal Horticultural Society. The three-year pilot ends in 2007. Plans are underway for extension of the programme to more schools in more countries.


The CGIAR’s Generation Challenge Program (GCP) is producing a Project Delivery Guide handbook with a matching grant from SFSA. Scheduled for a September rollout, the handbook is a web-based planning tool for GCP research grantees to help them define critical pathways and project decision points. Among the themes covered are: product and user specifications, project phases and decision milestones, governance of decisions and roles, activity planning, critical path analysis and risk management, functional expertise requirements, project monitoring and reporting requirements and freedom to operate. Dr. Vivienne Anthony is consultant on the project, under the direction of the GCP team.