ilri overview
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ILRI overview
CGIAR Fund Council Visit to ILRINairobi, 8 November 2013
SOME FACTS ABOUT THE LIVESTOCK SECTOR
Gains in meat consumption in developing countries outpace that of developed countries
1980 1990 2002 2015 20300
50
100
150
200
250
300
developingdeveloped
Mill
ion
met
ric t
onne
s
FAO 2006
Rosegrant et al. 2009
The 4 billion people who live on less than US$10 a day (primarily in developing countries) represent a food market of about $2.9 trillion per year. (Hammond et al. 2007)
• 17 billion domestic animals• Asset value $1.4 trillion• Employs 1.3 billion people
Economic opportunities in the livestock sector
4 out of 5 of the highest valueglobal commodities are livestock
Source: FAOSTAT, 2013
6FAO, 2012Based on anticipated change in absolute tonnes of product comparing 2000 and 2030
Percentage growth in demandfor livestock products: 2000−2030
Provides food and nutritional security BUT overconsumption can cause obesity
Powers economic developmentBUT equitable development can be a challenge
Improves human healthBUT animal-human/emerging diseases and unsafe foods need to be addressed
Enhances the environmentBUT pollution, land/water degradation,GHG emissions and biodiversity lossesmust be greatly reduced
Opportunities and challengesin the livestock sector
HOW SHOULD ILRI, OUR PARTNERS and PARTNERSHIPS RESPOND
ILRI strategy and the CGIAR Consortium
CGIAR consortium
ILRI strategy
Global livestock issues
Mission (Purpose)
WHY ILRI exists
WHAT ILRI does
HOW the strategy is operationalized
Strategic objectives (informed by strategic issues
– external and internal environment))
Critical success factors performance areas
overlapping do NOT map to structure
ILRI strategy 2013 – 2022: key elements
Mission and vision
ILRI envisions a world where all people have access to enough food and livelihood options to
fulfill their potential.
ILRI’s mission is to improve food and nutritional security and to reduce poverty in developing
countries through research for efficient, safe and sustainable use of livestock—ensuring better
lives through livestock.
Strategic objective 1
ILRI and its partners will develop, test, adapt and promote science-based practices that—being sustainable and scalable—achieve better lives through livestock.
Strategic objective 2
ILRI and its partners will provide compelling scientific evidence in ways that persuade decision-makers—from farms to boardrooms and parliaments—that smarter policies and bigger livestock investments can deliver significant socio-economic, health and environmental dividends to both poor nations and households.
Strategic objective 3
ILRI and its partners will work to increase capacity amongst ILRI’s key stakeholders and the institute itself so that they can make better use of livestock science and investments for better lives through livestock.
The critical success factors
THE CGIAR LIVESTOCK PORTFOLIO IN OPERATIONAL TERMS
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Dryland systemsLed by ICARDA
ILRI research on:- Mitigating vulnerability (PES,
IBLI....)- Sustainable intensification including trade-off and systems
analyses - Innovation systems, gender
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
HumidTropicsLed by IITA
ILRI research on:- Sustainable intensification including trade-off and systems
analyses - Livestock-environment
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Policy, institutions and markets
Led by IFPRIIncludes ILRI research on value
chains, systems and gender analyses
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Agriculture for enhanced nutrition and health
Led by IFPRIILRI leads component on prevention and control of
agriculture associated diseases- food borne diseases
- Zoonoses- Emerging infectious diseases
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Water, land and ecosystemsLed by IWMI
ILRI research on:- crop livestock systems in the Nile
and Volta basins; innovation platforms.....;
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Climate changeLed by CIAT
ILRI research on:- Systems analyses, macro level
and household models- Climate change mitigation and
adaptation in livestock systems
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
Managing and sustaining crop collections
Led by Global Crop Diversity TrustILRI forage genebank
19, 000 accessions
Dryland CerealsGrain Legumes
Livestock and FishMaizeRice
Roots, Tubers and BananasWheat
Climate Change, Agriculture and Food SecurityForests, Trees and Agroforestry
Water, Land and Ecosystems
HumidtropicsAquatic Agricultural Systems
Dryland Systems
Policies, Institutions, and MarketsAgriculture for Nutrition and Health
Genebanks
More milk, meat, and fish by and for the poor
Led by ILRI with CIAT, ICARDA and WorldFish
Livestock & Fish CRP
Innovating to produce more meat, milk and fish:
• For the poor: will there be sufficient affordable animal-source foods on the table of the poor to 2050 for healthy diets?
• By the poor: can we demonstrate that smallholders and the poor—and especially women-- can contribute to and benefit from producing and delivering a share of that food?
CRP Research Platforms• Productivity: Animal health,
genetics, feeds• Market Innovation• Targeting & Impact
Inputs & Services Production Processing Marketing Consumers
Aiming our research to transform selected pro-poor
value chains
Research partners working together at value chain level
GLOBAL RESEARCH PUBLIC GOODS
INTERVENTIONS TO SCALE OUT REGIONALLY
Major intervention led by development partners
Urgency and focus for relevant research!
Focusing research to design and generate evidence for
large-scale development interventions
Prioritizing an appropriate balance of short and long-
term research on the productivity drivers and social
science
For local solutions but with regional and global benefits
Year 1 Year 8-12Program horizon in a target value chain
Rel
ativ
e d
egre
e o
f in
volv
emen
t
Research partners
Development partners
AssessmentMobilization
Best bets
ExperimentsEvaluationEvidence
DesignPiloting
LessonsContext
AdvocacyDissemination
Attracting investment
Implementing large-scale
interventions
Knowledge partner
Stylized impact pathway for translating research into large-scale impact in a value chain
Recognizing and harnessing the role of research and development
In 9 meat, milk and fish value chains, and
through other CRPs and their sites
Focus, focus, focus! Working in 9 target value chains accountability
PIGS
AQUACULTURE
SHEEP & GOATS
DAIRY
SOME CHARACTERISTICS OF ILRI
ILRI’s research teams
31
Integrated sciences Biosciences
Animal science for sustainable productivity
BecA-ILRI hub
Food safety and zoonoses Vaccine platform
Livestock systems and the environment
Animal bioscience
Livelihoods, gender and impact Feed and forage bioscience
Policy, trade, value chains Bioscience facilities
With capacity development, business development, knowledge
management, PA, RM, IP….
Biosciences eastern and central Africa – ILRI Hub
a strategic partnership between ILRI and NEPAD.
a biosciences platform that makes the best lab facilities available to the African scientific community.
building African scientific capacity.
identifying agricultural solutions based on modern biotechnology.
hosted at ILRI’s headquarters, Nairobi, Kenya.
ILRI Resources 2013
• Staff: 600.• Budget: $74 million. • 130 senior scientists from
40 countries.• 56% of internationally
recruitedstaff are from 22 developing countries.
• 34% of internationally recruited staff are women.
• Large campuses in Kenya and Ethiopia.
ILRI Graduate Fellowship
• Graduate Fellows - MSc/PhD 6-36 months
ILRI Currently hosting 81
• Research Fellows - Non-degree related training in research methodologies up to 18 months)
ILRI Currently hosting 18
• Interns - Short-term, on-the-job training for young professionals 3-6 months. ILRI Currently hosting 35
ILRI budget 2014 $66.225 million
W1/2W3/BiBecA-ILRINon CRP
ILRI budget 2014 by CRP
drylandshumidtropicsPIML&FA4NHWLECCAFSgenebank
}
ILRI Offices
Mali
Nigeria
Mozambique
Kenya
Ethiopia
India
Sri Lanka
China
Laos
Vietnam
Thailand
Nairobi: HeadquartersAddis Ababa: principal campus In 2012, offices opened in:Kampala, UgandaHarare, Zimbabwe
Office in Bamako, Malirelocated toOuagadougou, Burkina FasoDakar, Senegal
Addis Campus – A CGIAR Campus
• ILRI• IWMI• IFPRI• CIMMYT• ICARDA• ICRAF• CIP• Bioversity• ICRISAT• CIAT
• icipe• IFAD• IFDC• BMGF
ILRI Nairobi campusIITA CIP CIMMYT IRRI (CIFOR)
At the foot of Kenya’s Ngong Hills★
Google’s view of the ILRI campus -laboratory and farm facilities
Labs
GHG
research
Farm and paddocks
In summary
• Long term strategy• ILRI’s Strategic objectives aligned with
4 SLOs of the CGIAR and pursued through the CRPs
• Diversity: trajectories; species; ILRI strengths; partners
• Livestock ‘goods’ and ‘bads’• Mainstreaming gender; human health • Clientele: Beyond livestock producers;
partners; capacity development
The presentation has a Creative Commons licence. You are free to re-use or distribute this work, provided credit is given to ILRI.
better lives through livestock
ilri.org
Strategy materials: www.ilri.org/mission
Strategic issues that inform
Strategic objectives
Food security challenge
Need to deliver at
scale
Role of women
Diversity of challenges
and opportunities for the poor
Address human
health and environment
al issues
Significant new science
Disproportionately low livestock funding
Need for greater capacity
ILRI – fit for purpose
Growth scenarios for livestock systems
• ‘Strong growth’– Where good market access and
increasing productivity provide opportunities for continued smallholder participation.
• ‘Fragile growth’– Where remoteness, marginal land
resources or agroclimatic vulnerability restrict intensification.
• ‘High growth with externalities’– Fast changing livestock systems
potentially damaging the environment and human health
• Different research and development challenges for poverty, food security, health and nutrition, environment
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