Annual report 1999-2000

The Rewards of Rice Research

Why should anyone give money to rice research? What would IRRI achieve with it? What should an "investor" hope to accomplish by donating it?

These are perhaps three of the most important questions facing IRRI and its partners in 2000—the year of the Institute’s 40 anniversary and the start of the new millennium.

In 1999, IRRI and the other 15 centers that make up the CGIAR were all urged to rename their donors, investors. This was done because most donors are increasingly seen as wanting some kind of "return" on the money they are giving to agricultural research.

IRRI welcomed this move. This report is part of our ongoing efforts to make sure the rewards of rice research are obvious to everyone—not just those who have supported our work for so long, but also those who we hope will support it in the future.

The easy answer to the question, What are the returns on rice research?, is that it helps to ensure food security and alleviate hunger and poverty. This is the basic reason that so many nations, organizations, and groups have given so generously to IRRI over the past 40 years.

But in an era of stiff competition for development assistance, that is clearly no longer enough. Although we still face the same problems of hunger and poverty, we cannot expect people, organizations, or governments to continue to give without showing them more clearly what we have achieved in the past and can achieve in the future.

The theme of this report, the rewards of rice research, is just the first step by IRRI to deal with this most important of challenges. We are determined to show the world, and our investors, that it is essential that they continue to invest in rice research if they are sincerely committed to eradicating hunger and poverty in Asia.

At IRRI, we have adapted an old saying to read, "Give people a bowl of rice and you feed them for a day; help them grow better rice and you feed them, and their families, for a lifetime."

This is the real reward of rice research; a safe and secure future for all those who eat it.

Ronald P. Cantrell
Director General



Table of Contents (pdf files require Acrobat Reader) 
 

The Rewards of Rice Research/The Rewards Are There for All to See

A Few Case Histories

The New Plants

Bigger Harvests, a Cleaner Planet Banking on the Future New Directions: Moving Closer to Farmers Program Highlights for 1999

IRRI's 40 Years (Timeline)


 

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Annual Report 2000-2001

Annual Report 1999-2000

Annual Report 1998-1999

Annual Report 1997-1998

Annual Report 1995-1996

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