Farm Progress

Strategy to fight hunger, build sustainability

New research strategy from USDA and USAID emphasizes agriculture’s role in global food security.

Rachel Schutte, Content Producer

October 19, 2022

2 Min Read
Scientist researching and genetics of rice in a rice field
Getty/ipopba

The issue of global food security is more important now than ever. Prices for food, fuel and fertilizer continue to rise around the globe and there is no clear end in sight for conflict in the Black Sea.

Today, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack and USAID Administrator Samantha Power released the U.S. government’s Global Food Security Research Strategy. The plan underscores our country’s commitment to ending hunger and malnutrition and building sustainable food systems.

The new research strategy comes in response to the updated Global Food Security Strategy released in October 2021. While the objectives of the GFSS remain the same, the updated strategy prioritizes climate change, equity and inclusion, and affordable high-quality diets.

The GFSS makes clear that sustainable growth of ag productivity is the most effective way to reduce extreme poverty and hunger by lifting incomes and making healthy diets affordable. A 1% increase in agricultural gross domestic product per worker results in two to four times the impact on poverty compared to increases in labor productivity in industry or services.

USDA and USAID developed the Global Food Security Research Strategy with input from scientific societies, universities, federal research agencies and researchers. The new research strategy focuses on three areas where science and innovation are essential to progress:

  1. Climate-smart agricultural innovations

  2. Improved nutrition through high-quality, affordable diets, and

  3. Genetic improvement of resilient crops and livestock

As a result of today’s announcement, the strategy will guide investments in technologies, tools, and practices and help identify research opportunities to improve food security. Current opportunities include reducing greenhouse gas emissions, improving carbon sequestration through soil health and improving irrigation and water usage technology.

The new strategy builds on past achievements made possible by U.S. investments in agriculture research. Examples include averting global wheat harvest failure from a strain of wheat stem rust over the last 15 years and bringing drought-tolerant corn to eastern and southern regions of Africa.

U.S. farmers, ranchers, and consumers also benefit from these investments through improved production, staying ahead of new pests, and preparing for changing climate. U.S. research initiatives have also advanced vaccines for livestock and limited invasive crop pests and diseases.

“Investment in, and support for, agricultural research and development is imperative so that the world’s farmers have access to innovations that enhance productivity and efficiency, build resilience and prosperity, while adapting to challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic, water insecurity, the climate crisis, and conflict,” says Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack.

USAID Administrator Samantha Power says, “Climate change shows no signs of slowing. Neither does hunger. This Strategy confronts these dual, interlinked threats with one of our most powerful weapons: research and innovation.”

About the Author

Rachel Schutte

Content Producer, Farm Futures

Rachel grew up in central Wisconsin and earned a B.S. in soil and crop science from the University of Wisconsin - Platteville. Before joining the Farm Futures team, Rachel spent time in the field as an agronomist before transitioning to the world of marketing and communications. She now resides in northeast Iowa where she enjoys raising bottle calves and farming corn and soybeans alongside her husband and his family.

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