This the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
Norman Borlaug led what was known as the
Green Revolution. As a plant scientist, he may have saved more lives than
anyone else in history -- as many as a billion, by some estimates. He traveled
the world to help poor people develop better ways to produce food.
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| Norman Borlaug |
He
worked in the fields to show farmers new ways to grow wheat, rice and other
crops. And he worked in the laboratory to breed new wheat varieties that could
resist disease. Lately he worried about a new threat, a fungus called Ug99. It
was discovered in Uganda ten years ago and has spread in Africa and now Asia.
NORMAN BORLAUG: "This is a new strain of stem rust
organism that has the power to destroy most of the wheat varieties being grown
around the world."
Norman
Borlaug taught at Texas A&M University and worked on international projects
until not long before his death on September twelfth. He was ninety-five and
suffering from cancer.
In nineteen forty-four he began work on a project in
Mexico financed by the Rockefeller Foundation. By the middle of the nineteen fifties,
Mexico had doubled its wheat production per hectare.
Norman Borlaug and his team had even
greater success in Pakistan and India. Farmers could grow four times more than before.
Later in life he tried to bring the Green Revolution to Africa.
He
won the Nobel Peace Prize in nineteen seventy and the Presidential Medal of
Freedom seven years later. He won the Congressional Gold Medal two years ago.
But not everyone
considered him a hero. Environmental activists criticized his intensive methods,
including the use of fertilizers and pesticides. He suggested that Western
critics had never known real hunger, and wondered if they had ever watched
their children go hungry. But later, he also urged farmers not to overuse chemicals.
At his ninety-fifth birthday party in March, Norman
Borlaug told VOA that he was worried about the world's ability to feed itself.
NORMAN BORLAUG: "We are adding eighty-four million
people to the population every year. We have a big job on our hands."
World hunger has been rising slowly
since the late nineties. A big increase is expected this year because of the
economic crisis, combined with higher food prices.
The
World Food Program said last week that the number of hungry people will pass
one billion this year for the first time in history. But the United Nations
agency says the flow of food aid is at a twenty-year low.
And that's the VOA
Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. I'm Bob Doughty.