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May 16, 2022

The seed sector furthers its engagement for sustainable agriculture

The global seed sector meets again in person since 2019, taking steps to promote innovation and the movement of quality seed to support sustainable agriculture amidst a changing and increasingly challenging world.

Image credit: oatsy40 on Flickr
(CC BY 2.0)
The International Seed Federation (ISF) has chosen Spain as the venue for the World Seed Congress 2022 held in Barcelona from 16-18 May, co-organised with the Spanish seed associations ANOVE and APROSE. This event has returned the most important meeting of the international seed sector to its face-to-face format after having been postponed for two years due to the pandemic. More than 1,400 professionals are attending the congress in person, while another 1,000 are expected to take part via the online platform Channel World Seed.

The seed as the starting point of the food chain
Referring to the Congress slogan Sowing a Vibrant Future, ISF General Secretary Michael Keller said during today's press conference: "Today the theme of our congress takes on a whole new meaning as we face the consequences of the war in Ukraine. Only through peace and cooperation and partnership at local, national, and international level can we ensure that quality seeds contribute to food and nutrition security by making sufficient, diverse, locally adapted and improved varieties available to all farmers, while respecting environmental, health, social and economic aspects."

In the face of the crisis, ISF reaffirmed "the need for seeds to be able to move globally in order to ensure farmers' access to this critical farming input anywhere in the world".

"Seeds are the starting point of the food chain," said Mr Keller, highlighting the important role that the breeding of new plant varieties plays in agricultural production, as well as the need to "continue to invest heavily in research. For many decades, plant breeding has helped improve agricultural productivity by improving plant potential and seed quality and has intrinsically contributed to the increase in global food production."

According to the Noleppa report, over the last 20 years, 67 percent of the annual growth in EU agricultural productivity has been due to contributions from plant and seed breeding. Moreover, without the work of plant breeders, agricultural yields in the EU would have been 20 percent lower.

"Continuous genetic progress through innovation in plant breeding is essential to face new challenges, including climate change."

Feeding 10 billion people
In 2050, the world population is expected to reach 9.7 billion people, according to the FAO. To feed the planet, agricultural production must substantially increase.

According to Donald Coles, ISF President, "the challenge for agriculture and food production today is to grow more using the same area of land, using fewer natural resources, and more sustainably.' Coles pointed out that, over the past 50 years, "public-private partnerships in plant breeding have helped increase agricultural yields of some crops by up to 90 percent, while at the same time making it possible to increase food production to feed a growing population.'

Antonio Villarroel, Secretary General of ANOVE, stated that "this challenge will only be addressed if we all –not just the breeding companies— continue to make a firm commitment to innovation. This is the only way to be competitive and to provide real value, both to the farmer and to the whole chain, while at the same time satisfying the demands of the increasingly demanding end-consumers."

Eduard Fitó, Director of Semillas Fitó, a family-owned seed company founded in Catalunya, said that "although seed represents a small part of the final cost of food production, it can spell the difference between a good and a bad harvest. The seed sector, therefore, is a critical part of the food system and its impact is felt throughout the entire chain."

Thanks to innovation in plant breeding, world food production continues to increase, "which allows for more stable income and direct benefits for farmers and producers, and for wider food choices, availability, nutrition and safety for consumers. All this is possible because of the genetic improvement of plants and seeds on which plant breeders are working,' Mr Villarroel concluded.

Mr Villarroel explained that "Spain is a world power in plant breeding and will be even more so in the coming years. Due to climate change, Spain is already the best laboratory in Europe in which to study how to deal with new temperatures and new challenges to ensure the future of agriculture and, ultimately, the future of food."

Plant breeding, an essential activity for the future of agriculture 
Globally, the seed market size is $60 billion, with maize and soybean accounting for the largest share. In the European Union, the breeding industry has a turnover of more than €7 billion and employs around 50,000 people, a quarter of them specifically dedicated to research. The Spanish seed market reached a turnover of approximately 750 million euros in 2020, making it the third largest in Europe and the thirteenth largest worldwide.

Marco van Leeuwen, Vice-President of ISF, said: "Not many other sectors can boast of investing up to 30% of their profits in research.'

He explained that "in the EU alone, more than 2,500 new varieties are released every year; there are more than 45,000 varieties registered in the European catalogue and more than 200,000 worldwide."

The latest breeding methods, such as gene editing, make it possible to speed up the process of developing new and better varieties, making them available to farmers all over the world. Moreover, they are more precise and allow breeders to understand and use more of the natural diversity within each species. In this respect, van Leeuwen called for 'coherent, proportionate, predictable and science-based national and European regulations but also at right consistency at international level."

Mr Coles concluded, "continuous genetic progress through innovation in plant breeding is essential to face new challenges, including climate change."

For more information about the ISF visit the website, HERE.


The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine Milling and Grain
which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.

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