News – for May. 23, 2011

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Published: May 23, 2011

Alberta student wins CFMBC scholarship

Three students have been selected by the Canadian Farm Business Management Council (CFBMC) to receive a $1,000 scholarship each to further their education in agriculture.

Students in an agriculture or agri-food program at a post-secondary educational institute were asked to submit a three-to five-minute video on the question, “As a future farm manager, how will you balance the environmental stewardship necessary for the safeguarding of our water, air and soil with the need to be productive and competitive in a global economy?”

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Potatoes are examined.

Farming Smarter receives financial boost from Alberta government for potato research

Farming Smarter near Lethbridge got a boost to its research equipment, thanks to the Alberta government’s increase in funding for research associations.

Winners were Gabriel Gosselin (Institut de technologie agroalimentaire – Campus de La Pocatire, QC), Jessica Harbers (Lethbridge College) and Mathieu Ouellette (Université Laval, QC)

The winning videos are available at www.farmcentre.com/Features/TheNewFarmer/Resources/StudentAwards/winners.aspx

Food security key to global peace – FAO candidate

The world has to act against hunger, which affects 13 per cent of the population, if it wants to strengthen global security, a candidate to run the UN Food and Agriculture Organization said April 27. Franz Fischler, an Austrian who is former EU agriculture commissioner, said during an interview the whipsaw effect of volatile food prices complicates the effort to expand local production and improve the welfare of subsistence farmers. Prices spiked in mid-2008, plunged in 2009 and hit a record high early this year.

World leaders set a goal in 2000 of halving the portion of the world population that suffers from hunger, reducing it to seven per cent. Some 13 per cent are now undernourished, based on latest FAO figures, compared to roughly 14 per cent when the goal was set.

“Food security is becoming more and more also an issue of national security,” said Fischler, pointing to unrest in food-short countries and its impact on neighbours.

FAO, with 3,600 workers, is one of three UN antihunger agencies. It specializes in longer-term food projects and collects data on agriculture, nutrition, commodities and sustainable development.

FAO’s 187 member nations will elect a new director general during a meeting in late June in Rome for a term lasting 3-1/2 years from January 2012.

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