Ethiopian scientist wins World Food Prize for sorghum

Video of 2009 Laureate Announcement Ceremony

Video of Dr. Gebisa Ejeta

Picture of Award ceremony below;

 The 2009 World Food Prize award ceremony in pictures on October 15 at Iowa State Capitol;

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Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia, got up out of he seat and danced with some of the performers who danced traditional dances from Ethiopia during the 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony. The 2009 World Food Prize was awarded to Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia, whose sorghum hybrids resistant to drought and the devastating Striga weed have dramatically increased the production and availability of one of the worldÕs five principal grains and enhanced the food supply of hundreds of millions of people in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia processes down the stair to he seat where he will accept his award.

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The 2009 World Food Prize was awarded to Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia. Gov. Chet Culver applauds in the background during tghe 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony.

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Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia, got up out of he seat and danced with some of the performers who danced traditional dances from Ethiopia during the 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony.

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Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia, got up out of he seat and danced with some of the performers who danced traditional dances from Ethiopia during the 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony.

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Chachi Tadesse, a singer from Ethiopia performed Thursday night during the 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony. She sang “I am an Aftican”.

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Chachi Tadesse, a singer from Ethiopia performed Thursday night during the 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony. She sang “I am an Aftican”.

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Dancers from Ethiopia performed during The 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony.

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Dancers from Ethiopia performed during The 2009 World Food Prize Laureate Award Ceremony. Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia, looks on.

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Read Dr Gebisa’s life story below;

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The 2009 World Food Prize will be awarded to Dr. Gebisa Ejeta of Ethiopia, whose sorghum hybrids resistant to drought and the devastating Striga weed have dramatically increased the production and availability of one of the world’s five principal grains and enhanced the food supply of hundreds of millions of people in sub-Saharan Africa.

OVERCOMING EARLY OBSTACLES THROUGH EDUCATION

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Born in 1950, Gebisa Ejeta grew up in a one-room thatched hut with a mud floor, in a rural village in west-central Ethiopia.

His mother’s deep belief in education and her struggle to provide her son with access to local teachers and schools provided the young Ejeta with the means to rise out of poverty and hardship. His mother made arrangements for him to attend school in a neighboring town. Walking 20 kilometers every Sunday night to attend school during the week and then back home on Friday, he rapidly ascended through eight grades and passed the national exam qualifying him to enter high school.

Ejeta’s high academic standing earned him financial assistance and entrance to the secondary-level Jimma Agricultural and Technical School, which had been established by Oklahoma State University under the U.S. government’s Point Four Program. After graduating with distinction, Ejeta entered Alemaya College (also established by OSU and supported by the U.S. Agency for International Development) in eastern Ethiopia. He received his bachelor’s degree in plant science in 1973.

In 1973, his college mentor introduced Ejeta to a renowned sorghum researcher, Dr. John Axtell of Purdue University, who invited him to assist in collecting sorghum species from around the country. Dr. Axtell was so impressed with Ejeta that he invited him to become his graduate student at Purdue University. This invitation came at a time when Ethiopia was about to enter a long period of political instability which would keep Ejeta from returning to his home country for nearly 25 years.

Ejeta entered Purdue in 1974, earning his Ph.D. in plant breeding and genetics. He later became a faculty member at Purdue, where today he holds a distinguished professorship.

Developing Drought-Tolerant Crops for Africa

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Upon completing his graduate degree, Dr. Ejeta accepted a position as a sorghum researcher at the International Crop Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) office in Sudan. During his time at ICRISAT, Dr. Ejeta developed the first hybrid sorghum varieties for Africa, which were drought-tolerant and high-yielding.

With the local importance of sorghum in the human diet (made into breads, porridges, and beverages), and the vast potential of dryland agriculture in Sudan, Dr. Ejeta’s drought-tolerant hybrids brought dramatic gains in crop productivity and also catalyzed the initiation of a commercial sorghum seed industry in Sudan.

His Hageen Dura-1, as the hybrid was named, was released in 1983 following field trials in which the hybrids out-yielded traditional sorghum varieties by 50 to 100 percent. Its superior grain qualities contributed to its rapid spread and wide acceptance by farmers, who found that yields increased to more than 150 percent greater than local sorghum, far surpassing the percentage gain in the trials.

Dr. Ejeta’s dedication to helping poor farmers feed themselves and their families and rise out of poverty propelled his work in leveraging the gains of his hybrid breeding breakthrough. He urged the establishment of structures to monitor production, processing, certification, and marketing of hybrid seed—and farmer-education programs in the use of fertilizers, soil and water conservation, and other supportive crop management practices.

By 1999, one million acres of Hageen Dura-1 had been harvested by hundreds of thousands of Sudanese farmers, and millions of Sudanese had been fed with grain produced by Hageen Dura-1.

Another drought-tolerant sorghum hybrid, NAD-1, was developed for conditions in Niger by Dr. Ejeta and one of his graduate students at Purdue University in 1992. This cultivar has had yields 4 or 5 times the national sorghum average.

Using some of the drought-tolerant germplasm from the hybrids in Niger and Sudan, Dr. Ejeta also developed elite sorghum inbred lines for the U.S. sorghum hybrid industry. He has released over 70 parental lines for the U.S. seed industry’s use in commercial sorghum hybrids in both their domestic and international markets.

Defeating the Scourge of Striga

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Dr. Ejeta’s next breakthrough came in the 1990s, the culmination of his research to conquer the greatest biological impediment to food production in Africa – the deadly parasitic weed Striga, known commonly as witchweed, which devastates yields of crops including maize, rice, pearl millet, sugarcane, and sorghum, thus severely limiting food availability. A 2009 UN Environmental Programme report estimated that Striga plagues 40% of arable savannah land and over 100 million people in Africa.

Previous attempts by African sorghum farmers to control the deadly weed, including crop management techniques and application of herbicides, had failed until Dr. Ejeta and his Purdue colleague Dr. Larry Butler formulated a novel research paradigm for genetic control of this scourge. With financial support from the Rockefeller Foundation and USAID, they developed an approach integrating genetics, agronomy, and biochemistry that focused on unraveling the intricate relationships between the parasitic Striga and the host sorghum plant. Eventually, they identified genes for Striga resistance and transferred them into locally adapted sorghum varieties and improved sorghum cultivars. The new sorghum also possessed broad adaptation to different African ecological conditions and farming systems.

The dissemination of the new sorghum varieties in Striga-endemic African countries was initially facilitated in 1994 by Dr. Ejeta, working closely with World Vision International and Sasakawa2000. Those organizations coordinated a pilot program, with USAID funding, that distributed eight tons of seed to Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Senegal, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe. The yield increases from the improved Striga-resistant cultivars have been as much as four times the yield of local varieties, even in the severe drought areas.

In 2002-2003, Dr. Ejeta introduced an integrated Striga management (ISM) package, again through a pilot program funded by USAID, to deploy in Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Tanzania along with the Striga-resistant sorghum varieties he and his colleagues had developed at Purdue. This ISM package achieved further increased crop productivity through a synergistic combination of weed resistance in the host plant, soil-fertility enhancement, and water conservation.

Empowering Farmers, Inspiring Young Scientists

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By partnering with leaders and farmers across sub-Saharan Africa and educational institutions in the U.S. and abroad, Dr. Ejeta has personally trained and inspired a new generation of African agricultural scientists that is carrying forth his work.

Dr. Ejeta’s scientific breakthroughs in breeding drought-tolerant and Striga-resistant sorghum have been combined with his persistent efforts to foster economic development and the empowerment of subsistence farmers through the creation of agricultural enterprises in rural Africa. He has led his colleagues in working with national and local authorities and nongovernmental agencies so that smallholder farmers and rural entrepreneurs can catalyze efforts to improve crop productivity, strengthen nutritional security, increase the value of agricultural products, and boost the profitability of agricultural enterprise – thus fostering profound impacts on lives and livelihoods on broader scale across the African continent.

Source: World Food Prize
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19 Responses to “Ethiopian scientist wins World Food Prize for sorghum”

  1. Anbese says:

    Well done, Professor- Gebisa Ejeta

  2. Sifan Gemechu says:

    Hi Dr, Ejeta
    I am so surprise when I saw on my computer today Your a good development and the empowerment of subsistence
    farmers !!!!!!!!!
    It is verey good.

    Sifan Gemechu
    from:- Silver spring,MD
    USA

  3. Aleen 7 says:

    Congratulation Professor and keep up the good work.

  4. keneni says:

    But may I try to know what he did to the farmers in Ethiopia? What I see is things he did in the Sudan and Niger. What about Ethiopia that gave you all the nursing until the completion of your BA degree in Alemaya?

  5. Almaz Bekele says:

    Ethiopia has been identified with famine and Webster Dictionary defines famine illustrating the Ethiopian famine. The Ethiopian scientist, has redeemed us all by by sending the new seeds
    to the village where the scientist was born. I very much hope that famine would be a hisory in
    Ethiopia, like the Irish famine.

  6. abie says:

    Keep it up Dr.Gabisa Ejeta! but our country is suffering with an end less famine. so pls consalt them(the Dedebits)if they are willy to hear you.
    Try to serve your people who thought you!
    Any ways God bless you!
    “korteh akorahan”!

  7. tig says:

    ‘Will done’ Dr G Ejetal
    But there is more too do in our home [Ethiopia]

  8. setegn says:

    please go ahead dr.Gabisa and please help our mother land with what you can ethiopian proud of you , keep it up.

  9. Bayaybin Medfu says:

    Me and my family are proud of you when we see you work and reading about you.Keep up God blease you and our country Ethiopia

  10. ENDEMAMETE says:

    Almighty God bless you and your children . AMEN. You have done at least something good for the world’s poorest of poorests.It is the concerned governements to run behind Dr Gibesa Ejeta’s Sorgum, which has high ability of drought resistance and gives high opportunities to the farmers to get high rpoduction. The newly founded sorgum must be named Dr Gibesa’s sorgum. But the poor ethiopia and her children have high expectation from Ethiopia’s scientist Gibesa to find some thing good and new to drive out ethiopia from poverty. i am sure if the world food programm gave this newly founded sorgum to Ethiopia’s farmers, TPLF will export to another country and will sell for others as they sold food aid which they recieved for the international communities to save over 4m tegeray’s starved people in 1977–1979 . check on http://www.ethioedia.com. by ato geberedeh araya

  11. Tola says:

    You did great. I am proud of you. I know many Oromos and other Ethiopians do feel the same. I liked the Oromo Dance— Regadaa. I wish I was there.

    You are great. Keep up.

  12. bekele says:

    In my point of view filling the information gap is one means of proving an intellectual value. Thankyou! Don’t forget a word of recognition is nothing but a springboard for additional output for you and others. I hope your long experience will have more in the near future.

  13. misgana says:

    I’m proud of him Ethiopian has a might have some more like Gebisa’s. May GOD BLESS YOU (Dr.Gebisa and his families)
    All ethiopians proud of you will pay off from ALMIGHTY GOD

  14. titi says:

    Dr gebisa kortehe akorahen ahunem yebelete endetesera egziabher edmena tena yesethe amin

  15. ETHIOPIA says:

    GOBEZE JEGNA !!!!!!!!!

    ETHIOPIA TEKDEM

  16. Anonymous says:

    ዶ/ር ገቢሳ ፡ ሃገራችን እንደርሶ ያለ ድንቅ ሰው አንዳላት ሳውቅ በአጅጉ እኮራለሁ ።
    በውጭ ሃገር ተበታትነው ያሉ ብዙ ምሁራን አሉ ። አንድ ቀን ሁሉም ተሰባስቦ ለሃገሩ እንደሚሰራ ተስፋ አደርጋለሁ ፡፡
    እግዚያብሂር ሃገራችንንና ህዝቡን ይባርክ .

  17. Ermiase says:

    Congra

  18. tsgfaris says:

    i am so proud of you!!!!!!!!!!

  19. Chala Gemechu says:

    Iam proud of you with my proffesional staff keep up with such like (nuuf jirradhu amayyu)!! from HAWASSA UNIVERSITY(Msc) student& instructor of Mekele university

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