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Norman Borlaug

Norman Ernest Borlaug (/ˈbɔːrlɔːɡ/; March 25, 1914 – September 12, 2009)[2] was an American agronomist who led initiatives worldwide that contributed to the extensive increases in agricultural production termed the Green Revolution. Borlaug was awarded multiple honors for his work, including the Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal, one of only seven people to have received all three awards.[3]

Norman Borlaug
Borlaug in 2004
Born(1914-03-25)March 25, 1914
DiedSeptember 12, 2009(2009-09-12) (aged 95)
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Minnesota (BS, MS, PhD)
Known for
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
ThesisVariation and Variability in Fusarium lini. (1942)
Doctoral advisorJonas Jergon Christensen
Other academic advisorsElvin C. Stakman

Borlaug received his B.S. in forestry in 1937 and PhD in plant pathology and genetics from the University of Minnesota in 1942. He took up an agricultural research position with CIMMYT in Mexico, where he developed semi-dwarf, high-yield, disease-resistant wheat varieties.[4][1] During the mid-20th century, Borlaug led the introduction of these high-yielding varieties combined with modern agricultural production techniques to Mexico, Pakistan, and India. As a result, Mexico became a net exporter of wheat by 1963. Between 1965 and 1970, wheat yields nearly doubled in Pakistan and India, greatly improving the food security in those nations.[5]

Borlaug was often called "the father of the Green Revolution",[6][7] and is credited with saving over a billion people worldwide from starvation.[8][3][9][10][11][12] According to Jan Douglas, executive assistant to the president of the World Food Prize Foundation, the source of this number is Gregg Easterbrook's 1997 article "Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity." The article states that the "form of agriculture that Borlaug preaches may have prevented a billion deaths."[13] Dennis T. Avery also estimated that the number of lives saved by Borlaug's efforts to be one billion.[12] In 2009, Josette Sheeran, then the Executive Director of the World Food Programme, stated that Borlaug "saved more lives than any man in human history".[14] He was awarded the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his contributions to world peace through increasing food supply.

Later in his life, he helped apply these methods of increasing food production in Asia and Africa.[15] He was also an accomplished wrestler in college and a pioneer of wrestling in the United States, being inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame for his contributions.[16][17]

Early life, education, and family edit

 
Norman Borlaug wrestling at the University of Minnesota

Borlaug was the great-grandchild of Norwegian immigrants to the United States. Ole Olson Dybevig and Solveig Thomasdatter Rinde, of Feios, a small village in Vik kommune, Sogn og Fjordane, Norway, emigrated to Dane County, Wisconsin, in 1854.[citation needed] The family eventually moved to the small Norwegian-American community of Saude, near Cresco, Iowa. There they were members of Saude Lutheran Church, where Norman was baptized and confirmed.

Borlaug was born to Henry Oliver (1889–1971) and Clara (Vaala) Borlaug (1888–1972) on his grandparents' farm in Saude in 1914, the first of four children. His three sisters were Palma Lillian (Behrens; 1916–2004), Charlotte (Culbert; 1919–2012) and Helen (b. d. 1921). From age seven to nineteen, he worked on the 106-acre (43 ha) family farm west of Protivin, Iowa, fishing, hunting, and raising corn, oats, timothy-grass, cattle, pigs and chickens. He attended the one-teacher, one-room New Oregon #8 rural school in Howard County, through eighth grade.

Today, the school building, built in 1865, is owned by the Norman Borlaug Heritage Foundation as part of "Project Borlaug Legacy".[18] Borlaug was a member of the football, baseball and wrestling teams at Cresco High School, where his wrestling coach, Dave Barthelma, continually encouraged him to "give 105%".[8]

Borlaug attributed his decision to leave the farm and pursue further education to his grandfather's urgent encouragement to learn: Nels Olson Borlaug (1859–1935) once told him, "you're wiser to fill your head now if you want to fill your belly later on."[19] When Borlaug applied for admission to the University of Minnesota in 1933, he failed its entrance exam, but was accepted at the school's newly created two-year General College. After two quarters, he transferred to the College of Agriculture's forestry program. As a member of the University of Minnesota men's wrestling team, Borlaug reached the Big Ten semifinals, and promoted the sport to Minnesota high schools in exhibition matches all around the state:

Wrestling taught me some valuable lessons... I always figured I could hold my own against the best in the world. It made me tough. Many times, I drew on that strength. It's an inappropriate crutch perhaps, but that's the way I'm made.[20]

To finance his studies, Borlaug put his education on hold periodically to earn some income, as he did in 1935 as a leader in the Civilian Conservation Corps, working with the unemployed on federal projects. Many of the people who worked for him were starving. He later recalled, "I saw how food changed them. All of this left scars on me".[21] From 1935 to 1938, before and after receiving his Bachelor of Science in forestry in 1937, Borlaug worked for the United States Forest Service at stations in Massachusetts and Idaho. He spent one summer in the middle fork of Idaho's Salmon River, the most isolated piece of wilderness in the nation at that time.[21]

In the last months of his undergraduate education, Borlaug attended a Sigma Xi lecture by Elvin Charles Stakman, a professor and soon-to-be head of the plant pathology group at the University of Minnesota. The event was a pivot for Borlaug's future. Stakman, in his speech entitled "These Shifty Little Enemies that Destroy our Food Crops", discussed the manifestation of the plant disease rust, a parasitic fungus that feeds on phytonutrients in wheat, oats, and barley crops. Stakman had discovered that special plant breeding methods produced plants resistant to rust. His research greatly interested Borlaug, and when Borlaug's job at the Forest Service was eliminated because of budget cuts, he asked Stakman if he should go into forest pathology. Stakman advised him to focus on plant pathology instead.[20] He subsequently enrolled at the university to study plant pathology under Stakman. Borlaug earned a Master of Science degree in 1940, and a Ph.D. in plant pathology and genetics in 1942.

Borlaug was a member of the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. While in college, he met his future wife, Margaret Gibson, as he waited tables at a coffee shop in the university's Dinkytown, where the two worked. They were married in 1937 and had three children, Norma Jean "Jeanie" Laube, Scotty (who died from spina bifida soon after birth), and William; five grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren. On March 8, 2007, Margaret Borlaug died at the age of 95 following a fall.[22] They had been married for 69 years. Borlaug resided in Dallas the last years of his life, although his global humanitarian efforts left him with only a few weeks of the year to spend there.[21]

Career edit

From 1942 to 1944, Borlaug was employed as a microbiologist at DuPont in Wilmington, Delaware. It was planned that he would lead research on industrial and agricultural bacteriocides, fungicides, and preservatives. However, following the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor Borlaug tried to enlist in the military, but was rejected under wartime labor regulations; his lab was converted to conduct research for the United States armed forces. One of his first projects was to develop glue that could withstand the warm salt water of the South Pacific. The Imperial Japanese Navy had gained control of the island of Guadalcanal, and patrolled the sky and sea by day. The only way for U.S. forces to supply the troops stranded on the island was to approach at night by speedboat, and jettison boxes of canned food and other supplies into the surf to wash ashore. The problem was that the glue holding these containers together disintegrated in saltwater. Within weeks, Borlaug and his colleagues had developed an adhesive that resisted corrosion, allowing food and supplies to reach the stranded Marines. Other tasks included work with camouflage, canteen disinfectants, DDT to control malaria, and insulation for small electronics.[21]

In 1940, the Avila Camacho administration took office in Mexico. The administration's primary goal for Mexican agriculture was augmenting the nation's industrialization and economic growth. U.S. Vice President-Elect Henry Wallace, who was instrumental in persuading the Rockefeller Foundation to work with the Mexican government in agricultural development, saw Avila Camacho's ambitions as beneficial to U.S. economic and military interests.[23] The Rockefeller Foundation contacted E.C. Stakman and two other leading agronomists. They developed a proposal for a new organization, the Office of Special Studies, as part of the Mexican Government, but directed by the Rockefeller Foundation. It was to be staffed with both Mexican and US scientists, focusing on soil development, maize and wheat production, and plant pathology.

Stakman chose Dr. Jacob George "Dutch" Harrar as project leader. Harrar immediately set out to hire Borlaug as head of the newly established Cooperative Wheat Research and Production Program in Mexico; Borlaug declined, choosing to finish his war service at DuPont.[24] In July 1944, after rejecting DuPont's offer to double his salary, and temporarily leaving behind his pregnant wife and 14-month-old daughter, he flew to Mexico City to head the new program as a geneticist and plant pathologist.[21]

In 1964, Borlaug was made the director of the International Wheat Improvement Program at El Batán, Texcoco, on the eastern fringes of Mexico City, as part of the newly established Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research's International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maíz y Trigo, or CIMMYT). Funding for this autonomous international research training institute developed from the Cooperative Wheat Research Production Program was undertaken jointly by the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations and the Mexican government.

Besides his work in genetic resistance against crop loss, Borlaug felt that pesticides including DDT had more benefits than drawbacks for humanity and advocated publicly for their continued use. He continued to support pesticide use despite the severe public criticism he received for it.[25][26] Borlaug mostly admired the work and personality of Rachel Carson but lamented her Silent Spring, what he saw as an inaccurate portrayal of the effects of DDT.[27]

Borlaug retired officially from the position in 1979, but remained a CIMMYT senior consultant. In addition to taking up charitable and educational roles, he continued to be involved in plant research at CIMMYT with wheat, triticale, barley, maize, and high-altitude sorghum.

In 1981, Borlaug became a founding member of the World Cultural Council.[28]

In 1984, Borlaug began teaching and conducting research at Texas A&M University. Eventually he was given the title Distinguished Professor of International Agriculture at the university and the holder of the Eugene Butler Endowed Chair in Agricultural Biotechnology.

He advocated for agricultural biotechnology as he had for pesticides in earlier decades: publicly, knowledgeably, and always despite heavy criticism.[29][26]

Borlaug served on the faculty of the University of Minnesota, University of Iowa, Cornell University, and Texas A&M University. Borlaug remained at A&M until his death in September 2009.

Wheat research in Mexico edit

The Cooperative Wheat Research Production Program, a joint venture by the Rockefeller Foundation and the Mexican Ministry of Agriculture, involved research in genetics, plant breeding, plant pathology, entomology, agronomy, soil science, and cereal technology. The goal of the project was to boost wheat production in Mexico, which at the time was importing a large portion of its grain. Plant pathologist George Harrar recruited and assembled the wheat research team in late 1944. The four other members were soil scientist William Colwell; maize breeder Edward Wellhausen; potato breeder John Niederhauser; and Norman Borlaug, all from the United States.[30] During the sixteen years Borlaug remained with the project, he bred a series of remarkably successful high-yield, disease-resistant, semi-dwarf wheat.

 
Wheat is the third most-produced cereal crop.

Borlaug said that his first few years in Mexico were difficult. He lacked trained scientists and equipment. Local farmers were hostile towards the wheat program because of serious crop losses from 1939 to 1941 due to stem rust. "It often appeared to me that I had made a dreadful mistake in accepting the position in Mexico," he wrote in the epilogue to his book, Norman Borlaug on World Hunger.[21] He spent the first ten years breeding wheat cultivars resistant to disease, including rust. In that time, his group made 6,000 individual crossings of wheat.[31]

Double harvest season edit

Initially, Borlaug's work had been concentrated in the central highlands, in the village of Chapingo near Texcoco, where the problems with rust and poor soil were most prevalent. The village never met their aims. He realized that he could speed up breeding by taking advantage of the country's two growing seasons. In the summer he would breed wheat in the central highlands as usual, then immediately take the seeds north to the Valle del Yaqui research station near Ciudad Obregón, Sonora. The difference in altitudes and temperatures would allow more crops to be grown each year.[citation needed]

Borlaug's boss, George Harrar, was against this expansion. Besides the extra costs of doubling the work, Borlaug's plan went against a then-held principle of agronomy that has since been disproved. It was believed that to store energy for germination before being planted, seeds needed a rest period after harvesting. When Harrar vetoed his plan, Borlaug resigned. Elvin Stakman, who was visiting the project, calmed the situation, talking Borlaug into withdrawing his resignation and Harrar into allowing the double wheat season. As of 1945, wheat would then be bred at locations 700 miles (1000 km) apart, 10 degrees apart in latitude, and 8,500 feet (2600 m) apart in altitude. This was called "shuttle breeding".[32]

 
Locations of Borlaug's research stations in the Yaqui Valley and Chapingo

As an unexpected benefit of the double wheat season, the new breeds did not have problems with photoperiodism. Normally, wheat varieties cannot adapt to new environments, due to the changing periods of sunlight. Borlaug later recalled, "As it worked out, in the north, we were planting when the days were getting shorter, at low elevation and high temperature. Then we'd take the seed from the best plants south and plant it at high elevation, when days were getting longer and there was lots of rain. Soon we had varieties that fit the whole range of conditions. That wasn't supposed to happen by the books".[31] This meant that the project would not need to start separate breeding programs for each geographic region of the planet.

Disease resistance through varieties of wheat edit

Because purebred (genotypically identical) plant varieties often only have one or a few major genes for disease resistance, and plant diseases such as rust are continuously producing new races that can overcome a pure line's resistance, multiple linear lines varieties were developed. Multiline varieties are mixtures of several phenotypically similar pure lines which each have different genes for disease resistance. By having similar heights, flowering and maturity dates, seed colors, and agronomic characteristics, they remain compatible with each other, and do not reduce yields when grown together on the field.[citation needed]

In 1953, Borlaug extended this technique by suggesting that several pure lines with different resistance genes should be developed through backcross methods using one recurrent parent.[33] Backcrossing involves crossing a hybrid and subsequent generations with a recurrent parent. As a result, the genotype of the backcrossed progeny becomes increasingly similar to that of the recurrent parent. Borlaug's method would allow the various different disease-resistant genes from several donor parents to be transferred into a single recurrent parent. To make sure each line has different resistant genes, each donor parent is used in a separate backcross program. Between five and ten of these lines may then be mixed depending upon the races of pathogen present in the region. As this process is repeated, some lines will become susceptible to the pathogen. These lines can easily be replaced with new resistant lines.

As new sources of resistance become available, new lines are developed. In this way, the loss of crops is kept to a minimum, because only one or a few lines become susceptible to a pathogen within a given season, and all other crops are unaffected by the disease. Because the disease would spread more slowly than if the entire population were susceptible, this also reduces the damage to susceptible lines. There is still the possibility that a new race of pathogen will develop to which all lines are susceptible, however.[34]

Dwarfing edit

Dwarfing is an important agronomic quality for wheat; dwarf plants produce thick stems. The cultivars Borlaug worked with had tall, thin stalks. Taller wheat grasses better compete for sunlight but tend to collapse under the weight of the extra grain—a trait called lodging—from the rapid growth spurts induced by nitrogen fertilizer Borlaug used in the poor soil. To prevent this, he bred wheat to favor shorter, stronger stalks that could better support larger seed heads. In 1953, he acquired a Japanese dwarf variety of wheat called Norin 10 developed by the agronomist Gonjiro Inazuka in Iwate Prefecture, including ones which had been crossed with a high-yielding American cultivar called Brevor 14 by Orville Vogel.[35] Norin 10/Brevor 14 is semi-dwarf (one-half to two-thirds the height of standard varieties) and produces more stalks and thus more heads of grain per plant. Also, larger amounts of assimilate were partitioned into the actual grains, further increasing the yield. Borlaug crossbred the semi-dwarf Norin 10/Brevor 14 cultivar with his disease-resistant cultivars to produce wheat varieties that were adapted to tropical and sub-tropical climates.[36]

Borlaug's new semi-dwarf, disease-resistant varieties, called Pitic 62 and Penjamo 62, changed the potential yield of spring wheat dramatically. By 1963, 95% of Mexico's wheat crops used the semi-dwarf varieties developed by Borlaug. That year, the harvest was six times larger than in 1944, the year Borlaug arrived in Mexico. Mexico had become fully self-sufficient in wheat production, and a net exporter of wheat.[37] Four other high-yield varieties were also released, in 1964: Lerma Rojo 64, Siete Cerros, Sonora 64, and Super X.

Expansion to South Asia: the Green Revolution edit

 
Wheat yields in Mexico, India and Pakistan, 1950 to 2004. Baseline is 500 kg/ha.

In 1961 to 1962, Borlaug's dwarf spring wheat strains were sent for multilocation testing in the International Wheat Rust Nursery, organized by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In March 1962, a few of these strains were grown in the fields of the Indian Agricultural Research Institute in Pusa, New Delhi, India. In May 1962, M. S. Swaminathan, a member of IARI's wheat program, requested of Dr B. P. Pal, director of IARI, to arrange for the visit of Borlaug to India and to obtain a wide range of dwarf wheat seed possessing the Norin 10 dwarfing genes.[citation needed] The letter was forwarded to the Indian Ministry of Agriculture headed by Shri C. Subramaniam, which arranged with the Rockefeller Foundation for Borlaug's visit.

In March 1963, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Mexican government sent Borlaug and Dr Robert Glenn Anderson to India to continue his work. He supplied 100 kg (220 lb) of seed from each of the four most promising strains and 630 promising selections in advanced generations to the IARI in October 1963, and test plots were subsequently planted at Delhi, Ludhiana, Pant Nagar, Kanpur, Pune and Indore.[citation needed] Anderson stayed as head of the Rockefeller Foundation Wheat Program in New Delhi until 1975.

During the mid-1960s the Indian subcontinent was at war and experienced minor famine and starvation, which was limited partially by the U.S. shipping a fifth of its wheat production to India in 1966 and 1967.[30] The Indian and Pakistani bureaucracies and the region's cultural opposition to new agricultural techniques initially prevented Borlaug from fulfilling his desire to immediately plant the new wheat strains there. In 1965, as a response to food shortages, Borlaug imported 550 tons of seeds for the government.[21]

Biologist Paul R. Ehrlich wrote in his 1968 bestseller The Population Bomb, "The battle to feed all of humanity is over ... In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now." Ehrlich said, "I have yet to meet anyone familiar with the situation who thinks India will be self-sufficient in food by 1971," and "India couldn't possibly feed two hundred million more people by 1980."[38]

In 1965, after extensive testing, Borlaug's team, under Anderson, began its effort by importing about 450 tons of Lerma Rojo and Sonora 64 semi-dwarf seed varieties: 250 tons went to Pakistan and 200 to India. They encountered many obstacles. Their first shipment of wheat was held up in Mexican customs and so it could not be shipped from the port at Guaymas in time for proper planting.[citation needed] Instead, it was sent via a 30-truck convoy from Mexico to the U.S. port in Los Angeles, encountering delays at the Mexico–United States border. Once the convoy entered the U.S., it had to take a detour, as the U.S. National Guard had closed the freeway due to the Watts riots in Los Angeles. When the seeds reached Los Angeles, a Mexican bank refused to honor Pakistan treasury's payment of US$100,000, because the check contained three misspelled words. Still, the seed was loaded onto a freighter destined for Bombay, India, and Karachi, Pakistan. Twelve hours into the freighter's voyage, war broke out between India and Pakistan over the Kashmir region. Borlaug received a telegram from the Pakistani minister of agriculture, Malik Khuda Bakhsh Bucha: "I'm sorry to hear you are having trouble with my check, but I've got troubles, too. Bombs are falling on my front lawn. Be patient, the money is in the bank..."[21]

These delays prevented Borlaug's group from conducting the germination tests needed to determine seed quality and proper seeding levels. They started planting immediately and often worked in sight of artillery flashes. A week later, Borlaug discovered that his seeds were germinating at less than half the normal rate.[citation needed] It later turned out that the seeds had been damaged in a Mexican warehouse by over-fumigation with a pesticide. He immediately ordered all locations to double their seeding rates.[39]

The initial yields of Borlaug's crops were higher than any ever harvested in South Asia. The countries subsequently committed to importing large quantities of both the Lerma Rojo 64 and Sonora 64 varieties. In 1966, India imported 18,000 tons—the largest purchase and import of any seed in the world at that time. In 1967, Pakistan imported 42,000 tons, and Turkey 21,000 tons. Pakistan's import, planted on 1.5 million acres (6,100 km2), produced enough wheat to seed the entire nation's wheatland the following year.[30] By 1968, when Ehrlich's book was released, William Gaud of the United States Agency for International Development was calling Borlaug's work a "Green Revolution". High yields led to a shortage of various utilities—labor to harvest the crops, bullock carts to haul it to the threshing floor, jute bags, trucks, rail cars, and grain storage facilities. Some local governments were forced to close school buildings temporarily to use them for grain storage.[21]

 
Wheat yields in least developed countries since 1961

In Pakistan, wheat yields nearly doubled, from 4.6 million tons in 1965 to 7.3 million tons in 1970; Pakistan was self-sufficient in wheat production by 1968.[citation needed] Yields were over 21 million tons by 2000. In India, yields increased from 12.3 million tons in 1965 to 20.1 million tons in 1970. By 1974, India was self-sufficient in the production of all cereals. By 2000, India was harvesting a record 76.4 million tons (2.81 billion bushels) of wheat. Since the 1960s, food production in both nations has increased faster than the rate of population growth.[citation needed] India's use of high-yield farming has prevented an estimated 100 million acres (400,000 km2) of virgin land from being converted into farmland—an area about the size of California, or 13.6% of the total area of India.[40] The use of these wheat varieties has also had a substantial effect on production in six Latin American countries, six countries in the Near and Middle East, and several others in Africa.[citation needed]

Borlaug's work with wheat contributed to the development of high-yield semi-dwarf indica and japonica rice cultivars at the International Rice Research Institute and China's Hunan Rice Research Institute. Borlaug's colleagues at the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research also developed and introduced a high-yield variety of rice throughout most of Asia. Land devoted to the semi-dwarf wheat and rice varieties in Asia expanded from 200 acres (0.8 km2) in 1965 to over 40 million acres (160,000 km2) in 1970. In 1970, this land accounted for over 10% of the more productive cereal land in Asia.[30]

Nobel Peace Prize edit

For his contributions to the world food supply, Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970. Norwegian officials notified his wife in Mexico City at 4:00 a.m., but Borlaug had already left for the test fields in the Toluca valley, about 40 miles (65 km) west of Mexico City. A chauffeur took her to the fields to inform her husband. According to his daughter, Jeanie Laube, "My mom said, 'You won the Nobel Peace Prize,' and he said, 'No, I haven't', ... It took some convincing ... He thought the whole thing was a hoax".[21] He was awarded the prize on December 10.

In his Nobel Lecture the following day, he speculated on his award: "When the Nobel Peace Prize Committee designated me the recipient of the 1970 award for my contribution to the 'green revolution', they were in effect, I believe, selecting an individual to symbolize the vital role of agriculture and food production in a world that is hungry, both for bread and for peace".[41] His speech repeatedly presented improvements in food production within a sober understanding of the context of population. "The green revolution has won a temporary success in man's war against hunger and deprivation; it has given man a breathing space. If fully implemented, the revolution can provide sufficient food for sustenance during the next three decades. But the frightening power of human reproduction must also be curbed; otherwise, the success of the green revolution will be ephemeral only.

"Most people still fail to comprehend the magnitude and menace of the "Population Monster"...Since man is potentially a rational being, however, I am confident that within the next two decades he will recognize the self-destructive course he steers along the road of irresponsible population growth..."[42]

Borlaug hypothesis edit

Borlaug continually advocated increasing crop yields as a means to curb deforestation. The large role he played in both increasing crop yields and promoting this view has led to this methodology being called by agricultural economists the "Borlaug hypothesis", namely that increasing the productivity of agriculture on the best farmland can help control deforestation by reducing the demand for new farmland. According to this view, assuming that global food demand is on the rise, restricting crop usage to traditional low-yield methods would also require at least one of the following: the world population to decrease, either voluntarily or as a result of mass starvations; or the conversion of forest land into crop land. It is thus argued that high-yield techniques are ultimately saving ecosystems from destruction. On a global scale, this view holds strictly true ceteris paribus, if deforestation only occurs to increase land for agriculture. But other land uses exist, such as urban areas, pasture, or fallow, so further research is necessary to ascertain what land has been converted for what purposes, to determine how true this view remains.[according to whom?]

Increased profits from high-yield production may also induce cropland expansion in any case, although as world food needs decrease, this expansion may decrease as well.[43]

Borlaug expressed the idea now known as the "Borlaug hypothesis" in a speech given in Oslo, Norway, in 2000, upon the occasion of the 30th anniversary of his acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize: "Had the global cereal yields of 1950 still prevailed in 1999, we would have needed nearly 1.8 billion ha of additional land of the same quality – instead of the 600 million that was used – to equal the current global harvest".[44]

Criticisms and his view of critics edit

Borlaug's name is nearly synonymous with the Green Revolution, against which many criticisms have been mounted over the decades. Throughout his years of research, Borlaug's programs often faced opposition by nonscientists who consider genetic crossbreeding to be unnatural, and therefore those that inherently dislike the unnatural criticized such crossbreeding.[45] These farming techniques, in addition to increasing yields, often reaped large profits for U.S. agribusiness and agrochemical corporations and were criticized by one author in 2003 as widening social inequality in the countries owing to uneven food distribution while forcing a capitalist agenda of U.S. corporations onto countries that had undergone land reform.[46]

Other concerns include the crossing of genetic barriers; the inability of a single crop to fulfill all nutritional requirements; the decreased biodiversity from planting a small number of varieties; the environmental and economic effects of inorganic fertilizer and pesticides; the side effects of large amounts of herbicides sprayed on fields of herbicide-resistant crops; and the destruction of wilderness caused by the construction of roads in populated third-world areas.[47]

Borlaug refuted or dismissed most claims of his critics but did take certain concerns seriously. He stated that his work has been "a change in the right direction, but it has not transformed the world into a Utopia".[48] Of environmental lobbyists opposing crop yield improvements, he stated, "some of the environmental lobbyists of the Western nations are the salt of the earth, but many of them are elitists. They've never experienced the physical sensation of hunger. They do their lobbying from comfortable office suites in Washington or Brussels. If they lived just one month amid the misery of the developing world, as I have for fifty years, they'd be crying out for tractors and fertilizer and irrigation canals and be outraged that fashionable elitists back home were trying to deny them these things".[49] Borlaug cautioned, "There are no miracles in agricultural production. Nor is there such a thing as a miracle variety of wheat, rice, or maize which can serve as an elixir to cure all ills of a stagnant, traditional agriculture."[50]

The journalist John Vidal, writing in The Guardian, commented that the plaudits and honors heaped on Borlaug present him as a "a saint or even the god of American farmers",[51] but that the technology was far from perfect. The Green Revolution promised to end hunger and poverty, and to benefit rural societies everywhere. Instead, its long-term effects included what the Indian environmentalist Vandana Shiva has called "rural impoverishment, increased debt, social inequality and the displacement of vast numbers of peasant farmers".[51] Vidal further cites the political commentator Alexander Cockburn, who wrote that Borlaug was "probably the biggest killer of all to have got the peace prize", given that his wheat "led to the death of peasants by the million."[51]

Later roles edit

Following his retirement, Borlaug continued to participate in teaching, research and activism. He spent much of the year based at CIMMYT in Mexico, conducting research, and four months of the year serving at Texas A&M University, where he had been a distinguished professor of international agriculture since 1984. From 1994 to 2003, Borlaug served on the International Fertilizer Development Center board of directors. In 1999, the university's Board of Regents named its US$16 million Center for Southern Crop Improvement in honor of Borlaug. He worked in the building's Heep Center, and taught one semester each year.[21]

Production in Africa edit

In the early 1980s, environmental groups that were opposed to Borlaug's methods campaigned against his planned expansion of efforts into Africa. They prompted the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations and the World Bank to stop funding most of his African agriculture projects. Western European governments were persuaded to stop supplying fertilizer to Africa. According to David Seckler, former Director General of the International Water Management Institute, "the environmental community in the 1980s went crazy pressuring the donor countries and the big foundations not to support ideas like inorganic fertilizers for Africa."[40]

In 1984, during the Ethiopian famine, Ryoichi Sasakawa, the chairman of the Japan Shipbuilding Industry Foundation (now the Nippon Foundation), contacted the semi-retired Borlaug, wondering why the methods used in Asia were not extended to Africa, and hoping Borlaug could help. He convinced Borlaug to help with this new effort,[52] and Borlaug assisted in creating the Sasakawa Africa Association (SAA) to coordinate the project.

 
Nigerian exchange students meet Norman Borlaug (third from right) at the World Food seminar, 2003.

The SAA is a research and extension organization that aims to increase food production in African countries that are struggling with food shortages. "I assumed we'd do a few years of research first," Borlaug later recalled, "but after I saw the terrible circumstances there, I said, 'Let's just start growing'."[40] Soon, Borlaug and the SAA had projects in seven countries. Yields of maize in developed African countries tripled. Yields of wheat, sorghum, cassava, and cowpeas also increased in these countries.[40] At present (more than ten years after Borlaug's death in 2009), program activities are under way in Benin, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Mali, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda, all of which suffered from repeated famines in previous decades.

From 1986 to 2009, Borlaug was the President of the SAA. That year, a joint venture between The Carter Center and SAA was launched called Sasakawa-Global 2000 (SG 2000).[53] The program focuses on food, population and agricultural policy.[54] Since then, more than 8 million small-scale farmers in 15 African countries have been trained in SAA farming techniques, which have helped them to double or triple grain production.[55] Those elements that allowed Borlaug's projects to succeed in India and Pakistan, such as well-organized market economies, transportation, and irrigation systems, are severely lacking throughout much of Africa, posing additional obstacles to increasing yields and reducing the ongoing threat of food shortages. Because of these challenges, Borlaug's initial projects were restricted to relatively developed regions of the continent.

Despite these setbacks, Borlaug found encouragement. Visiting Ethiopia in 1994 after a major famine, Jimmy Carter won Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's support for a campaign seeking to aid farmers, using the fertilizer diammonium phosphate and Borlaug's methods. The following season, Ethiopia recorded the largest harvests of major crops in history, with a 32% increase in production, and a 15% increase in average yield over the previous season. For Borlaug, the rapid increase in yields suggested that there was still hope for higher food production throughout sub-Saharan Africa,[40] despite lingering questions about population sustainability and the absence of long-term studies in Africa.

World Food Prize edit

The World Food Prize is an international award recognizing the achievements of individuals who have advanced human development by improving the quality, quantity or availability of food in the world. The prize was created in 1986 by Norman Borlaug, as a way to recognize personal accomplishments, and as a means of education by using the Prize to establish role models for others. The first prize was given to Borlaug's former colleague, M. S. Swaminathan, in 1987, for his work in India. The next year, Swaminathan used the US$250,000 prize to start the MS Swaminathan Research Foundation for research on sustainable development.

Global stem rust and the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative edit

In 2005, Borlaug, with his former graduate student Ronnie Coffman, convened an international expert panel in Kenya on the emerging threat of Ug99 in east Africa.[56] The working group produced a report, "Sounding the Alarm on Global Stem Rust", and their work led to the formation of the Global Rust Initiative. In 2008, with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the organization was re-named the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative[57]

Future of global farming and food supply edit

The limited potential for land expansion for cultivation worried Borlaug, who, in March 2005, stated that, "we will have to double the world food supply by 2050." With 85% of future growth in food production having to come from lands already in use, he recommends a multidisciplinary research focus to further increase yields, mainly through increased crop immunity to large-scale diseases, such as the rust fungus, which affects all cereals but rice. His dream was to "transfer rice immunity to cereals such as wheat, maize, sorghum and barley, and transfer bread-wheat proteins (gliadin and glutenin) to other cereals, especially rice and maize".[58]

Borlaug believed that genetically modified organisms (GMO) were the only way to increase food production as the world runs out of unused arable land. GMOs were not inherently dangerous "because we've been genetically modifying plants and animals for a long time. Long before we called it science, people were selecting the best breeds."[59] In a review of Borlaug's 2000 publication entitled Ending world hunger: the promise of biotechnology and the threat of antiscience zealotry,[60] the authors argued that Borlaug's warnings were still true in 2010:[61]

GM crops are as natural and safe as today's bread wheat, opined Dr. Borlaug, who also reminded agricultural scientists of their moral obligation to stand up to the antiscience crowd and warn policy makers that global food insecurity will not disappear without this new technology and ignoring this reality global food insecurity would make future solutions all the more difficult to achieve.

— Rozwadowski and Kagale

According to Borlaug, "Africa, the former Soviet republics, and the cerrado are the last frontiers. After they are in use, the world will have no additional sizable blocks of arable land left to put into production, unless you are willing to level whole forests, which you should not do. So, future food-production increases will have to come from higher yields. And though I have no doubt yields will keep going up, whether they can go up enough to feed the population monster is another matter. Unless progress with agricultural yields remains very strong, the next century will experience sheer human misery that, on a numerical scale, will exceed the worst of everything that has come before".[40]

Besides increasing the worldwide food supply, early in his career Borlaug stated that taking steps to decrease the rate of population growth will also be necessary to prevent food shortages. In his Nobel Lecture of 1970, Borlaug stated, "Most people still fail to comprehend the magnitude and menace of the 'Population Monster' ... If it continues to increase at the estimated present rate of two percent a year, the world population will reach 6.5 billion by the year 2000. Currently, with each second, or tick of the clock, about 2.2 additional people are added to the world population. The rhythm of increase will accelerate to 2.7, 3.3, and 4.0 for each tick of the clock by 1980, 1990, and 2000, respectively, unless man becomes more realistic and preoccupied about this impending doom. The tick-tock of the clock will continually grow louder and more menacing each decade. Where will it all end?"[41] However, some observers have suggested that by the 1990s Borlaug had changed his position on population control. They point to a quote from the year 2000 in which he stated: "I now say that the world has the technology—either available or well advanced in the research pipeline—to feed on a sustainable basis a population of 10 billion people. The more pertinent question today is whether farmers and ranchers will be permitted to use this new technology? While the affluent nations can certainly afford to adopt ultra low-risk positions, and pay more for food produced by the so-called 'organic' methods, the one billion chronically undernourished people of the low income, food-deficit nations cannot."[62] However, Borlaug remained on the advisory board of Population Media Center, an organization working to stabilize world population, until his death.[63]

Death edit

Borlaug died of lymphoma at the age of 95, on September 12, 2009, in his Dallas home.[2][64][4]

Borlaug's children released a statement saying, "We would like his life to be a model for making a difference in the lives of others and to bring about efforts to end human misery for all mankind."[65]

The Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh and President of India Pratibha Patil paid tribute to Borlaug saying, "Borlaug's life and achievement are testimony to the far-reaching contribution that one man's towering intellect, persistence and scientific vision can make to human peace and progress."[66]

The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) described Borlaug as "a towering scientist whose work rivals that of the 20th century's other great scientific benefactors of humankind"[67] and Kofi Annan, former Secretary-General of the United Nations said, "As we celebrate Dr. Borlaug's long and remarkable life, we also celebrate the long and productive lives that his achievements have made possible for so many millions of people around the world... we will continue to be inspired by his enduring devotion to the poor, needy and vulnerable of our world."[68]

Honors and awards edit

 
President George W. Bush speaks with National Medal of Science Laureates, White House, 2006. Dr. Norman E. Borlaug is second from left.
 
Dedication of the Norman Borlaug statue in the National Statuary Hall at the U. S. Capitol, 2014

In 1968, Borlaug received what he considered an especially satisfying tribute when the people of Ciudad Obregón, where some of his earliest experiments were undertaken, named a street after him. Also in that year, he became a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.

In 1970, he was given an honorary doctorate by the Agricultural University of Norway.[69]

In 1970, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize by the Norwegian Nobel Committee "for his contributions to the 'green revolution' that was having such an impact on food production particularly in Asia and in Latin America."[69]

In 1970, he was awarded the Order of the Aztec Eagle by the Mexican government.[70]

In 1971, he was named a Distinguished Fellow of the National Academy of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine of Argentina[71]

In 1971, he received the American Academy of Achievement's Golden Plate Award.[72]

In 1974, he was awarded a Peace Medal (in the form of a dove, carrying a wheat ear in its beak) by Haryana Agricultural University, Hisar, India.

In 1975, he was named a Distinguished Fellow of the Iowa Academy of Science.[73]

In 1980, he received the S. Roger Horchow Award for Greatest Public Service by a Private Citizen, an award given out annually by Jefferson Awards.[74]

In 1980, he was elected honorary member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

In 1984, his name was placed in the National Agricultural Hall of Fame at the national center in Bonner Springs, Kansas. Also that year, he was recognized for sustained service to humanity through outstanding contributions in plant breeding from the Governors Conference on Agriculture Innovations in Little Rock, Arkansas. Also in 1984, he received the Henry G. Bennet Distinguished Service Award at commencement ceremonies at Oklahoma State University.

In 2005 he was given the Charles A. Black Award for his contributions to public policy and the public understanding of science.

In 1986, Borlaug was inducted into the Scandinavian-American Hall of Fame during Norsk Høstfest.[75]

Borlaug was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 1987.[1][76]

On August 19, 2013, his statue was unveiled inside the ICAR's NASC Complex at New Delhi, India.[77]

On March 25, 2014, a statue of Borlaug at the United States Capitol was unveiled in a ceremony on the 100th anniversary of his birth. This statue replaces the statue of James Harlan as one of the two statues given to the National Statuary Hall Collection by the state of Iowa.

Borlaug received the 1977 U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom, the 2002 Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences,[78] the 2002 Rotary International Award for World Understanding and Peace, and the 2004 National Medal of Science. As of January 2004, Borlaug had received 49 honorary degrees from as many universities, in 18 countries, the most recent from Dartmouth College on June 12, 2005,[79] and was a foreign or honorary member of 22 international Academies of Sciences.[80] In Iowa and Minnesota, "World Food Day", October 16, is referred to as "Norman Borlaug World Food Prize Day". Throughout the United States, it is referred to as "World Food Prize Day".

In 2006, the Government of India conferred on him its second highest civilian award: the Padma Vibhushan.[81] He was awarded the Danforth Award for Plant Science by the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St Louis, Missouri in recognition of his lifelong commitment to increasing global agricultural production through plant science.

The stained-glass World Peace Window at St. Mark's Episcopal Cathedral in Minneapolis, Minnesota, depicts "peace makers" of the 20th century, including Norman Borlaug.[82]

 
President George W. Bush along with House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi congratulate Borlaug during the Congressional Gold Medal Ceremony on July 17, 2007.

In August 2006, Dr. Leon Hesser published The Man Who Fed the World: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Norman Borlaug and His Battle to End World Hunger, an account of Borlaug's life and work. On August 4, the book received the 2006 Print of Peace award, as part of International Read For Peace Week. Borlaug is also the subject of the documentary film The Man Who Tried to Feed the World which first aired on American Experience on April 21, 2020.[83][84]

On September 27, 2006, the United States Senate by unanimous consent passed the Congressional Tribute to Dr. Norman E. Borlaug Act of 2006. The act authorizes that Borlaug be awarded America's highest civilian award, the Congressional Gold Medal. On December 6, 2006, the House of Representatives passed the measure by voice vote. President George Bush signed the bill into law on December 14, 2006, and it became Public Law Number 109–395.[85] According to the act, "the number of lives Dr. Borlaug has saved [is] more than a billion people" The act authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to strike and sell duplicates of the medal in bronze.[86] He was presented with the medal on July 17, 2007.[87]

Borlaug was a foreign fellow of the Bangladesh Academy of Sciences.[88]

The Borlaug Dialogue (Norman E. Borlaug International Symposium) is named in his honour.

Books edit

 
Borlaug with United States Secretary of Agriculture Ann M. Veneman near the birthday cake prepared for his 90th birthday
  • The Green Revolution, Peace, and Humanity. 1970. Nobel Lecture, Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway. December 11, 1970.
  • Wheat in the Third World. 1982. Authors: Haldore Hanson, Norman E. Borlaug, and R. Glenn Anderson. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 0-86531-357-1
  • Land use, food, energy and recreation. 1983. Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies. ISBN 0-940222-07-8
  • Feeding a human population that increasingly crowds a fragile planet. 1994. Mexico City. ISBN 968-6201-34-3
  • Norman Borlaug on World Hunger. 1997. Edited by Anwar Dil. San Diego/Islamabad/Lahore: Bookservice International. 499 pages. ISBN 0-9640492-3-6
  • The Green Revolution Revisited and the Road Ahead. 2000. Anniversary Nobel Lecture, Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway. September 8, 2000.
  • "Ending World Hunger. The Promise of Biotechnology and the Threat of Antiscience Zealotry". 2000. Plant Physiology, October 2000, Vol. 124, pp. 487–90. (duplicate)
  • . International Fertilizer Development Center, 2003. ISBN 0-88090-144-6
  • Prospects for world agriculture in the twenty-first century. 2004. Norman E. Borlaug, Christopher R. Dowswell. Published in: Sustainable agriculture and the international rice-wheat system. ISBN 0-8247-5491-3
  • Foreword to The Frankenfood Myth: How Protest and Politics Threaten the Biotech Revolution. 2004. Henry I. Miller, Gregory Conko. ISBN 0-275-97879-6
  • Borlaug, Norman E. (June 27, 2007). "Sixty-two years of fighting hunger: personal recollections". Euphytica. 157 (3): 287–97. doi:10.1007/s10681-007-9480-9. S2CID 2927707.

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Further reading edit

  • Andy Andrews (2010). The Boy Who Changed The World (eBook : Juvenile Nonfiction). Thomas Nelson. ISBN 978-1418562519.
  • Bickel, Lennard (1974). Facing starvation; Norman Borlaug and the fight against hunger. Pleasantville, N.Y.: Reader's Digest Press; distributed by Dutton. ISBN 978-0-88349-015-0.
  • Hesser, Leon (2006). The Man Who Fed the World: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Norman Borlaug and His Battle to End World Hunger. Durban House. ISBN 978-1-930754-90-4.
  • Cullather, Nick (2010). The Hungry World: America's Cold War Battle against Poverty in Asia. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-05078-5.
  • Rajaram, S. (2011). "Norman Borlaug: The Man I Worked with and Knew". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 49: 17–30. doi:10.1146/annurev-phyto-072910-095308. PMID 21370972.
  • Vietmeyer, Noel (2013). Our Daily Bread: the Essential Norman Borlaug. Bracing Books. ISBN 978-0-578-09555-4.
  • Vietmeyer, Noel (2009). Borlaug; Volume 1, Right off the Farm 1914–1944. Bracing Books. ISBN 978-0-578-04125-4.
  • Vietmeyer, Noel (2010). Borlaug; Volume 2, Wheat Whisperer 1944–1959. Bracing Books. ISBN 978-0-578-03856-8.
  • Vietmeyer, Noel (2010). Borlaug; Volume 3, Bread Winner 1960–1969. Bracing Books. ISBN 978-057-806920-3.

External links edit

  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Norman E. Borlaug papers, University Archives, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities
  • The Pioneer of the Green Revolution
  • Norman Borlaug on Nobelprize.org  

norman, borlaug, norman, ernest, borlaug, ɔːr, ɔː, march, 1914, september, 2009, american, agronomist, initiatives, worldwide, that, contributed, extensive, increases, agricultural, production, termed, green, revolution, borlaug, awarded, multiple, honors, wor. Norman Ernest Borlaug ˈ b ɔːr l ɔː ɡ March 25 1914 September 12 2009 2 was an American agronomist who led initiatives worldwide that contributed to the extensive increases in agricultural production termed the Green Revolution Borlaug was awarded multiple honors for his work including the Nobel Peace Prize the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal one of only seven people to have received all three awards 3 Norman BorlaugBorlaug in 2004Born 1914 03 25 March 25 1914Cresco Iowa U S DiedSeptember 12 2009 2009 09 12 aged 95 Dallas Texas U S Alma materUniversity of Minnesota BS MS PhD Known forGreen Revolution World Food PrizeAwardsNobel Peace Prize 1970 Order of the Aztec Eagle 1970 Presidential Medal of Freedom 1977 ForMemRS 1987 1 Vannevar Bush Award 2000 Public Welfare Medal 2002 National Medal of Science 2004 Congressional Gold Medal 2006 Padma Vibhushan 2006 Scientific careerFieldsAgronomy Plant pathology GeneticsInstitutionsDuPont Cooperative Wheat Research and Production Program Mexico International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center Texas A amp M UniversityThesisVariation and Variability inFusarium lini 1942 Doctoral advisorJonas Jergon ChristensenOther academic advisorsElvin C StakmanBorlaug received his B S in forestry in 1937 and PhD in plant pathology and genetics from the University of Minnesota in 1942 He took up an agricultural research position with CIMMYT in Mexico where he developed semi dwarf high yield disease resistant wheat varieties 4 1 During the mid 20th century Borlaug led the introduction of these high yielding varieties combined with modern agricultural production techniques to Mexico Pakistan and India As a result Mexico became a net exporter of wheat by 1963 Between 1965 and 1970 wheat yields nearly doubled in Pakistan and India greatly improving the food security in those nations 5 Borlaug was often called the father of the Green Revolution 6 7 and is credited with saving over a billion people worldwide from starvation 8 3 9 10 11 12 According to Jan Douglas executive assistant to the president of the World Food Prize Foundation the source of this number is Gregg Easterbrook s 1997 article Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity The article states that the form of agriculture that Borlaug preaches may have prevented a billion deaths 13 Dennis T Avery also estimated that the number of lives saved by Borlaug s efforts to be one billion 12 In 2009 Josette Sheeran then the Executive Director of the World Food Programme stated that Borlaug saved more lives than any man in human history 14 He was awarded the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his contributions to world peace through increasing food supply Later in his life he helped apply these methods of increasing food production in Asia and Africa 15 He was also an accomplished wrestler in college and a pioneer of wrestling in the United States being inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame for his contributions 16 17 Contents 1 Early life education and family 2 Career 3 Wheat research in Mexico 3 1 Double harvest season 3 2 Disease resistance through varieties of wheat 3 3 Dwarfing 4 Expansion to South Asia the Green Revolution 4 1 Nobel Peace Prize 4 2 Borlaug hypothesis 4 3 Criticisms and his view of critics 5 Later roles 5 1 Production in Africa 5 2 World Food Prize 5 3 Global stem rust and the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative 5 4 Future of global farming and food supply 6 Death 7 Honors and awards 8 Books 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life education and family edit nbsp Norman Borlaug wrestling at the University of MinnesotaBorlaug was the great grandchild of Norwegian immigrants to the United States Ole Olson Dybevig and Solveig Thomasdatter Rinde of Feios a small village in Vik kommune Sogn og Fjordane Norway emigrated to Dane County Wisconsin in 1854 citation needed The family eventually moved to the small Norwegian American community of Saude near Cresco Iowa There they were members of Saude Lutheran Church where Norman was baptized and confirmed Borlaug was born to Henry Oliver 1889 1971 and Clara Vaala Borlaug 1888 1972 on his grandparents farm in Saude in 1914 the first of four children His three sisters were Palma Lillian Behrens 1916 2004 Charlotte Culbert 1919 2012 and Helen b d 1921 From age seven to nineteen he worked on the 106 acre 43 ha family farm west of Protivin Iowa fishing hunting and raising corn oats timothy grass cattle pigs and chickens He attended the one teacher one room New Oregon 8 rural school in Howard County through eighth grade Today the school building built in 1865 is owned by the Norman Borlaug Heritage Foundation as part of Project Borlaug Legacy 18 Borlaug was a member of the football baseball and wrestling teams at Cresco High School where his wrestling coach Dave Barthelma continually encouraged him to give 105 8 Borlaug attributed his decision to leave the farm and pursue further education to his grandfather s urgent encouragement to learn Nels Olson Borlaug 1859 1935 once told him you re wiser to fill your head now if you want to fill your belly later on 19 When Borlaug applied for admission to the University of Minnesota in 1933 he failed its entrance exam but was accepted at the school s newly created two year General College After two quarters he transferred to the College of Agriculture s forestry program As a member of the University of Minnesota men s wrestling team Borlaug reached the Big Ten semifinals and promoted the sport to Minnesota high schools in exhibition matches all around the state Wrestling taught me some valuable lessons I always figured I could hold my own against the best in the world It made me tough Many times I drew on that strength It s an inappropriate crutch perhaps but that s the way I m made 20 To finance his studies Borlaug put his education on hold periodically to earn some income as he did in 1935 as a leader in the Civilian Conservation Corps working with the unemployed on federal projects Many of the people who worked for him were starving He later recalled I saw how food changed them All of this left scars on me 21 From 1935 to 1938 before and after receiving his Bachelor of Science in forestry in 1937 Borlaug worked for the United States Forest Service at stations in Massachusetts and Idaho He spent one summer in the middle fork of Idaho s Salmon River the most isolated piece of wilderness in the nation at that time 21 In the last months of his undergraduate education Borlaug attended a Sigma Xi lecture by Elvin Charles Stakman a professor and soon to be head of the plant pathology group at the University of Minnesota The event was a pivot for Borlaug s future Stakman in his speech entitled These Shifty Little Enemies that Destroy our Food Crops discussed the manifestation of the plant disease rust a parasitic fungus that feeds on phytonutrients in wheat oats and barley crops Stakman had discovered that special plant breeding methods produced plants resistant to rust His research greatly interested Borlaug and when Borlaug s job at the Forest Service was eliminated because of budget cuts he asked Stakman if he should go into forest pathology Stakman advised him to focus on plant pathology instead 20 He subsequently enrolled at the university to study plant pathology under Stakman Borlaug earned a Master of Science degree in 1940 and a Ph D in plant pathology and genetics in 1942 Borlaug was a member of the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity While in college he met his future wife Margaret Gibson as he waited tables at a coffee shop in the university s Dinkytown where the two worked They were married in 1937 and had three children Norma Jean Jeanie Laube Scotty who died from spina bifida soon after birth and William five grandchildren and six great grandchildren On March 8 2007 Margaret Borlaug died at the age of 95 following a fall 22 They had been married for 69 years Borlaug resided in Dallas the last years of his life although his global humanitarian efforts left him with only a few weeks of the year to spend there 21 Career editFrom 1942 to 1944 Borlaug was employed as a microbiologist at DuPont in Wilmington Delaware It was planned that he would lead research on industrial and agricultural bacteriocides fungicides and preservatives However following the December 7 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor Borlaug tried to enlist in the military but was rejected under wartime labor regulations his lab was converted to conduct research for the United States armed forces One of his first projects was to develop glue that could withstand the warm salt water of the South Pacific The Imperial Japanese Navy had gained control of the island of Guadalcanal and patrolled the sky and sea by day The only way for U S forces to supply the troops stranded on the island was to approach at night by speedboat and jettison boxes of canned food and other supplies into the surf to wash ashore The problem was that the glue holding these containers together disintegrated in saltwater Within weeks Borlaug and his colleagues had developed an adhesive that resisted corrosion allowing food and supplies to reach the stranded Marines Other tasks included work with camouflage canteen disinfectants DDT to control malaria and insulation for small electronics 21 In 1940 the Avila Camacho administration took office in Mexico The administration s primary goal for Mexican agriculture was augmenting the nation s industrialization and economic growth U S Vice President Elect Henry Wallace who was instrumental in persuading the Rockefeller Foundation to work with the Mexican government in agricultural development saw Avila Camacho s ambitions as beneficial to U S economic and military interests 23 The Rockefeller Foundation contacted E C Stakman and two other leading agronomists They developed a proposal for a new organization the Office of Special Studies as part of the Mexican Government but directed by the Rockefeller Foundation It was to be staffed with both Mexican and US scientists focusing on soil development maize and wheat production and plant pathology Stakman chose Dr Jacob George Dutch Harrar as project leader Harrar immediately set out to hire Borlaug as head of the newly established Cooperative Wheat Research and Production Program in Mexico Borlaug declined choosing to finish his war service at DuPont 24 In July 1944 after rejecting DuPont s offer to double his salary and temporarily leaving behind his pregnant wife and 14 month old daughter he flew to Mexico City to head the new program as a geneticist and plant pathologist 21 In 1964 Borlaug was made the director of the International Wheat Improvement Program at El Batan Texcoco on the eastern fringes of Mexico City as part of the newly established Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research s International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maiz y Trigo or CIMMYT Funding for this autonomous international research training institute developed from the Cooperative Wheat Research Production Program was undertaken jointly by the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations and the Mexican government Besides his work in genetic resistance against crop loss Borlaug felt that pesticides including DDT had more benefits than drawbacks for humanity and advocated publicly for their continued use He continued to support pesticide use despite the severe public criticism he received for it 25 26 Borlaug mostly admired the work and personality of Rachel Carson but lamented her Silent Spring what he saw as an inaccurate portrayal of the effects of DDT 27 Borlaug retired officially from the position in 1979 but remained a CIMMYT senior consultant In addition to taking up charitable and educational roles he continued to be involved in plant research at CIMMYT with wheat triticale barley maize and high altitude sorghum In 1981 Borlaug became a founding member of the World Cultural Council 28 In 1984 Borlaug began teaching and conducting research at Texas A amp M University Eventually he was given the title Distinguished Professor of International Agriculture at the university and the holder of the Eugene Butler Endowed Chair in Agricultural Biotechnology He advocated for agricultural biotechnology as he had for pesticides in earlier decades publicly knowledgeably and always despite heavy criticism 29 26 Borlaug served on the faculty of the University of Minnesota University of Iowa Cornell University and Texas A amp M University Borlaug remained at A amp M until his death in September 2009 Wheat research in Mexico editThe Cooperative Wheat Research Production Program a joint venture by the Rockefeller Foundation and the Mexican Ministry of Agriculture involved research in genetics plant breeding plant pathology entomology agronomy soil science and cereal technology The goal of the project was to boost wheat production in Mexico which at the time was importing a large portion of its grain Plant pathologist George Harrar recruited and assembled the wheat research team in late 1944 The four other members were soil scientist William Colwell maize breeder Edward Wellhausen potato breeder John Niederhauser and Norman Borlaug all from the United States 30 During the sixteen years Borlaug remained with the project he bred a series of remarkably successful high yield disease resistant semi dwarf wheat nbsp Wheat is the third most produced cereal crop Borlaug said that his first few years in Mexico were difficult He lacked trained scientists and equipment Local farmers were hostile towards the wheat program because of serious crop losses from 1939 to 1941 due to stem rust It often appeared to me that I had made a dreadful mistake in accepting the position in Mexico he wrote in the epilogue to his book Norman Borlaug on World Hunger 21 He spent the first ten years breeding wheat cultivars resistant to disease including rust In that time his group made 6 000 individual crossings of wheat 31 Double harvest season edit Initially Borlaug s work had been concentrated in the central highlands in the village of Chapingo near Texcoco where the problems with rust and poor soil were most prevalent The village never met their aims He realized that he could speed up breeding by taking advantage of the country s two growing seasons In the summer he would breed wheat in the central highlands as usual then immediately take the seeds north to the Valle del Yaqui research station near Ciudad Obregon Sonora The difference in altitudes and temperatures would allow more crops to be grown each year citation needed Borlaug s boss George Harrar was against this expansion Besides the extra costs of doubling the work Borlaug s plan went against a then held principle of agronomy that has since been disproved It was believed that to store energy for germination before being planted seeds needed a rest period after harvesting When Harrar vetoed his plan Borlaug resigned Elvin Stakman who was visiting the project calmed the situation talking Borlaug into withdrawing his resignation and Harrar into allowing the double wheat season As of 1945 wheat would then be bred at locations 700 miles 1000 km apart 10 degrees apart in latitude and 8 500 feet 2600 m apart in altitude This was called shuttle breeding 32 nbsp Locations of Borlaug s research stations in the Yaqui Valley and ChapingoAs an unexpected benefit of the double wheat season the new breeds did not have problems with photoperiodism Normally wheat varieties cannot adapt to new environments due to the changing periods of sunlight Borlaug later recalled As it worked out in the north we were planting when the days were getting shorter at low elevation and high temperature Then we d take the seed from the best plants south and plant it at high elevation when days were getting longer and there was lots of rain Soon we had varieties that fit the whole range of conditions That wasn t supposed to happen by the books 31 This meant that the project would not need to start separate breeding programs for each geographic region of the planet Disease resistance through varieties of wheat edit Because purebred genotypically identical plant varieties often only have one or a few major genes for disease resistance and plant diseases such as rust are continuously producing new races that can overcome a pure line s resistance multiple linear lines varieties were developed Multiline varieties are mixtures of several phenotypically similar pure lines which each have different genes for disease resistance By having similar heights flowering and maturity dates seed colors and agronomic characteristics they remain compatible with each other and do not reduce yields when grown together on the field citation needed In 1953 Borlaug extended this technique by suggesting that several pure lines with different resistance genes should be developed through backcross methods using one recurrent parent 33 Backcrossing involves crossing a hybrid and subsequent generations with a recurrent parent As a result the genotype of the backcrossed progeny becomes increasingly similar to that of the recurrent parent Borlaug s method would allow the various different disease resistant genes from several donor parents to be transferred into a single recurrent parent To make sure each line has different resistant genes each donor parent is used in a separate backcross program Between five and ten of these lines may then be mixed depending upon the races of pathogen present in the region As this process is repeated some lines will become susceptible to the pathogen These lines can easily be replaced with new resistant lines As new sources of resistance become available new lines are developed In this way the loss of crops is kept to a minimum because only one or a few lines become susceptible to a pathogen within a given season and all other crops are unaffected by the disease Because the disease would spread more slowly than if the entire population were susceptible this also reduces the damage to susceptible lines There is still the possibility that a new race of pathogen will develop to which all lines are susceptible however 34 Dwarfing edit Dwarfing is an important agronomic quality for wheat dwarf plants produce thick stems The cultivars Borlaug worked with had tall thin stalks Taller wheat grasses better compete for sunlight but tend to collapse under the weight of the extra grain a trait called lodging from the rapid growth spurts induced by nitrogen fertilizer Borlaug used in the poor soil To prevent this he bred wheat to favor shorter stronger stalks that could better support larger seed heads In 1953 he acquired a Japanese dwarf variety of wheat called Norin 10 developed by the agronomist Gonjiro Inazuka in Iwate Prefecture including ones which had been crossed with a high yielding American cultivar called Brevor 14 by Orville Vogel 35 Norin 10 Brevor 14 is semi dwarf one half to two thirds the height of standard varieties and produces more stalks and thus more heads of grain per plant Also larger amounts of assimilate were partitioned into the actual grains further increasing the yield Borlaug crossbred the semi dwarf Norin 10 Brevor 14 cultivar with his disease resistant cultivars to produce wheat varieties that were adapted to tropical and sub tropical climates 36 Borlaug s new semi dwarf disease resistant varieties called Pitic 62 and Penjamo 62 changed the potential yield of spring wheat dramatically By 1963 95 of Mexico s wheat crops used the semi dwarf varieties developed by Borlaug That year the harvest was six times larger than in 1944 the year Borlaug arrived in Mexico Mexico had become fully self sufficient in wheat production and a net exporter of wheat 37 Four other high yield varieties were also released in 1964 Lerma Rojo 64 Siete Cerros Sonora 64 and Super X Expansion to South Asia the Green Revolution editFurther information Green Revolution and Green Revolution in India nbsp Wheat yields in Mexico India and Pakistan 1950 to 2004 Baseline is 500 kg ha In 1961 to 1962 Borlaug s dwarf spring wheat strains were sent for multilocation testing in the International Wheat Rust Nursery organized by the U S Department of Agriculture In March 1962 a few of these strains were grown in the fields of the Indian Agricultural Research Institute in Pusa New Delhi India In May 1962 M S Swaminathan a member of IARI s wheat program requested of Dr B P Pal director of IARI to arrange for the visit of Borlaug to India and to obtain a wide range of dwarf wheat seed possessing the Norin 10 dwarfing genes citation needed The letter was forwarded to the Indian Ministry of Agriculture headed by Shri C Subramaniam which arranged with the Rockefeller Foundation for Borlaug s visit In March 1963 the Rockefeller Foundation and the Mexican government sent Borlaug and Dr Robert Glenn Anderson to India to continue his work He supplied 100 kg 220 lb of seed from each of the four most promising strains and 630 promising selections in advanced generations to the IARI in October 1963 and test plots were subsequently planted at Delhi Ludhiana Pant Nagar Kanpur Pune and Indore citation needed Anderson stayed as head of the Rockefeller Foundation Wheat Program in New Delhi until 1975 During the mid 1960s the Indian subcontinent was at war and experienced minor famine and starvation which was limited partially by the U S shipping a fifth of its wheat production to India in 1966 and 1967 30 The Indian and Pakistani bureaucracies and the region s cultural opposition to new agricultural techniques initially prevented Borlaug from fulfilling his desire to immediately plant the new wheat strains there In 1965 as a response to food shortages Borlaug imported 550 tons of seeds for the government 21 Biologist Paul R Ehrlich wrote in his 1968 bestseller The Population Bomb The battle to feed all of humanity is over In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now Ehrlich said I have yet to meet anyone familiar with the situation who thinks India will be self sufficient in food by 1971 and India couldn t possibly feed two hundred million more people by 1980 38 In 1965 after extensive testing Borlaug s team under Anderson began its effort by importing about 450 tons of Lerma Rojo and Sonora 64 semi dwarf seed varieties 250 tons went to Pakistan and 200 to India They encountered many obstacles Their first shipment of wheat was held up in Mexican customs and so it could not be shipped from the port at Guaymas in time for proper planting citation needed Instead it was sent via a 30 truck convoy from Mexico to the U S port in Los Angeles encountering delays at the Mexico United States border Once the convoy entered the U S it had to take a detour as the U S National Guard had closed the freeway due to the Watts riots in Los Angeles When the seeds reached Los Angeles a Mexican bank refused to honor Pakistan treasury s payment of US 100 000 because the check contained three misspelled words Still the seed was loaded onto a freighter destined for Bombay India and Karachi Pakistan Twelve hours into the freighter s voyage war broke out between India and Pakistan over the Kashmir region Borlaug received a telegram from the Pakistani minister of agriculture Malik Khuda Bakhsh Bucha I m sorry to hear you are having trouble with my check but I ve got troubles too Bombs are falling on my front lawn Be patient the money is in the bank 21 These delays prevented Borlaug s group from conducting the germination tests needed to determine seed quality and proper seeding levels They started planting immediately and often worked in sight of artillery flashes A week later Borlaug discovered that his seeds were germinating at less than half the normal rate citation needed It later turned out that the seeds had been damaged in a Mexican warehouse by over fumigation with a pesticide He immediately ordered all locations to double their seeding rates 39 The initial yields of Borlaug s crops were higher than any ever harvested in South Asia The countries subsequently committed to importing large quantities of both the Lerma Rojo 64 and Sonora 64 varieties In 1966 India imported 18 000 tons the largest purchase and import of any seed in the world at that time In 1967 Pakistan imported 42 000 tons and Turkey 21 000 tons Pakistan s import planted on 1 5 million acres 6 100 km2 produced enough wheat to seed the entire nation s wheatland the following year 30 By 1968 when Ehrlich s book was released William Gaud of the United States Agency for International Development was calling Borlaug s work a Green Revolution High yields led to a shortage of various utilities labor to harvest the crops bullock carts to haul it to the threshing floor jute bags trucks rail cars and grain storage facilities Some local governments were forced to close school buildings temporarily to use them for grain storage 21 nbsp Wheat yields in least developed countries since 1961In Pakistan wheat yields nearly doubled from 4 6 million tons in 1965 to 7 3 million tons in 1970 Pakistan was self sufficient in wheat production by 1968 citation needed Yields were over 21 million tons by 2000 In India yields increased from 12 3 million tons in 1965 to 20 1 million tons in 1970 By 1974 India was self sufficient in the production of all cereals By 2000 India was harvesting a record 76 4 million tons 2 81 billion bushels of wheat Since the 1960s food production in both nations has increased faster than the rate of population growth citation needed India s use of high yield farming has prevented an estimated 100 million acres 400 000 km2 of virgin land from being converted into farmland an area about the size of California or 13 6 of the total area of India 40 The use of these wheat varieties has also had a substantial effect on production in six Latin American countries six countries in the Near and Middle East and several others in Africa citation needed Borlaug s work with wheat contributed to the development of high yield semi dwarf indica and japonica rice cultivars at the International Rice Research Institute and China s Hunan Rice Research Institute Borlaug s colleagues at the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research also developed and introduced a high yield variety of rice throughout most of Asia Land devoted to the semi dwarf wheat and rice varieties in Asia expanded from 200 acres 0 8 km2 in 1965 to over 40 million acres 160 000 km2 in 1970 In 1970 this land accounted for over 10 of the more productive cereal land in Asia 30 Nobel Peace Prize edit For his contributions to the world food supply Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 Norwegian officials notified his wife in Mexico City at 4 00 a m but Borlaug had already left for the test fields in the Toluca valley about 40 miles 65 km west of Mexico City A chauffeur took her to the fields to inform her husband According to his daughter Jeanie Laube My mom said You won the Nobel Peace Prize and he said No I haven t It took some convincing He thought the whole thing was a hoax 21 He was awarded the prize on December 10 In his Nobel Lecture the following day he speculated on his award When the Nobel Peace Prize Committee designated me the recipient of the 1970 award for my contribution to the green revolution they were in effect I believe selecting an individual to symbolize the vital role of agriculture and food production in a world that is hungry both for bread and for peace 41 His speech repeatedly presented improvements in food production within a sober understanding of the context of population The green revolution has won a temporary success in man s war against hunger and deprivation it has given man a breathing space If fully implemented the revolution can provide sufficient food for sustenance during the next three decades But the frightening power of human reproduction must also be curbed otherwise the success of the green revolution will be ephemeral only Most people still fail to comprehend the magnitude and menace of the Population Monster Since man is potentially a rational being however I am confident that within the next two decades he will recognize the self destructive course he steers along the road of irresponsible population growth 42 Borlaug hypothesis edit Borlaug continually advocated increasing crop yields as a means to curb deforestation The large role he played in both increasing crop yields and promoting this view has led to this methodology being called by agricultural economists the Borlaug hypothesis namely that increasing the productivity of agriculture on the best farmland can help control deforestation by reducing the demand for new farmland According to this view assuming that global food demand is on the rise restricting crop usage to traditional low yield methods would also require at least one of the following the world population to decrease either voluntarily or as a result of mass starvations or the conversion of forest land into crop land It is thus argued that high yield techniques are ultimately saving ecosystems from destruction On a global scale this view holds strictly true ceteris paribus if deforestation only occurs to increase land for agriculture But other land uses exist such as urban areas pasture or fallow so further research is necessary to ascertain what land has been converted for what purposes to determine how true this view remains according to whom Increased profits from high yield production may also induce cropland expansion in any case although as world food needs decrease this expansion may decrease as well 43 Borlaug expressed the idea now known as the Borlaug hypothesis in a speech given in Oslo Norway in 2000 upon the occasion of the 30th anniversary of his acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize Had the global cereal yields of 1950 still prevailed in 1999 we would have needed nearly 1 8 billion ha of additional land of the same quality instead of the 600 million that was used to equal the current global harvest 44 Criticisms and his view of critics edit Borlaug s name is nearly synonymous with the Green Revolution against which many criticisms have been mounted over the decades Throughout his years of research Borlaug s programs often faced opposition by nonscientists who consider genetic crossbreeding to be unnatural and therefore those that inherently dislike the unnatural criticized such crossbreeding 45 These farming techniques in addition to increasing yields often reaped large profits for U S agribusiness and agrochemical corporations and were criticized by one author in 2003 as widening social inequality in the countries owing to uneven food distribution while forcing a capitalist agenda of U S corporations onto countries that had undergone land reform 46 Other concerns include the crossing of genetic barriers the inability of a single crop to fulfill all nutritional requirements the decreased biodiversity from planting a small number of varieties the environmental and economic effects of inorganic fertilizer and pesticides the side effects of large amounts of herbicides sprayed on fields of herbicide resistant crops and the destruction of wilderness caused by the construction of roads in populated third world areas 47 Borlaug refuted or dismissed most claims of his critics but did take certain concerns seriously He stated that his work has been a change in the right direction but it has not transformed the world into a Utopia 48 Of environmental lobbyists opposing crop yield improvements he stated some of the environmental lobbyists of the Western nations are the salt of the earth but many of them are elitists They ve never experienced the physical sensation of hunger They do their lobbying from comfortable office suites in Washington or Brussels If they lived just one month amid the misery of the developing world as I have for fifty years they d be crying out for tractors and fertilizer and irrigation canals and be outraged that fashionable elitists back home were trying to deny them these things 49 Borlaug cautioned There are no miracles in agricultural production Nor is there such a thing as a miracle variety of wheat rice or maize which can serve as an elixir to cure all ills of a stagnant traditional agriculture 50 The journalist John Vidal writing in The Guardian commented that the plaudits and honors heaped on Borlaug present him as a a saint or even the god of American farmers 51 but that the technology was far from perfect The Green Revolution promised to end hunger and poverty and to benefit rural societies everywhere Instead its long term effects included what the Indian environmentalist Vandana Shiva has called rural impoverishment increased debt social inequality and the displacement of vast numbers of peasant farmers 51 Vidal further cites the political commentator Alexander Cockburn who wrote that Borlaug was probably the biggest killer of all to have got the peace prize given that his wheat led to the death of peasants by the million 51 Later roles editFollowing his retirement Borlaug continued to participate in teaching research and activism He spent much of the year based at CIMMYT in Mexico conducting research and four months of the year serving at Texas A amp M University where he had been a distinguished professor of international agriculture since 1984 From 1994 to 2003 Borlaug served on the International Fertilizer Development Center board of directors In 1999 the university s Board of Regents named its US 16 million Center for Southern Crop Improvement in honor of Borlaug He worked in the building s Heep Center and taught one semester each year 21 Production in Africa edit In the early 1980s environmental groups that were opposed to Borlaug s methods campaigned against his planned expansion of efforts into Africa They prompted the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations and the World Bank to stop funding most of his African agriculture projects Western European governments were persuaded to stop supplying fertilizer to Africa According to David Seckler former Director General of the International Water Management Institute the environmental community in the 1980s went crazy pressuring the donor countries and the big foundations not to support ideas like inorganic fertilizers for Africa 40 In 1984 during the Ethiopian famine Ryoichi Sasakawa the chairman of the Japan Shipbuilding Industry Foundation now the Nippon Foundation contacted the semi retired Borlaug wondering why the methods used in Asia were not extended to Africa and hoping Borlaug could help He convinced Borlaug to help with this new effort 52 and Borlaug assisted in creating the Sasakawa Africa Association SAA to coordinate the project nbsp Nigerian exchange students meet Norman Borlaug third from right at the World Food seminar 2003 The SAA is a research and extension organization that aims to increase food production in African countries that are struggling with food shortages I assumed we d do a few years of research first Borlaug later recalled but after I saw the terrible circumstances there I said Let s just start growing 40 Soon Borlaug and the SAA had projects in seven countries Yields of maize in developed African countries tripled Yields of wheat sorghum cassava and cowpeas also increased in these countries 40 At present more than ten years after Borlaug s death in 2009 program activities are under way in Benin Burkina Faso Ethiopia Ghana Guinea Mali Malawi Mozambique Nigeria Tanzania and Uganda all of which suffered from repeated famines in previous decades From 1986 to 2009 Borlaug was the President of the SAA That year a joint venture between The Carter Center and SAA was launched called Sasakawa Global 2000 SG 2000 53 The program focuses on food population and agricultural policy 54 Since then more than 8 million small scale farmers in 15 African countries have been trained in SAA farming techniques which have helped them to double or triple grain production 55 Those elements that allowed Borlaug s projects to succeed in India and Pakistan such as well organized market economies transportation and irrigation systems are severely lacking throughout much of Africa posing additional obstacles to increasing yields and reducing the ongoing threat of food shortages Because of these challenges Borlaug s initial projects were restricted to relatively developed regions of the continent Despite these setbacks Borlaug found encouragement Visiting Ethiopia in 1994 after a major famine Jimmy Carter won Prime Minister Meles Zenawi s support for a campaign seeking to aid farmers using the fertilizer diammonium phosphate and Borlaug s methods The following season Ethiopia recorded the largest harvests of major crops in history with a 32 increase in production and a 15 increase in average yield over the previous season For Borlaug the rapid increase in yields suggested that there was still hope for higher food production throughout sub Saharan Africa 40 despite lingering questions about population sustainability and the absence of long term studies in Africa World Food Prize edit The World Food Prize is an international award recognizing the achievements of individuals who have advanced human development by improving the quality quantity or availability of food in the world The prize was created in 1986 by Norman Borlaug as a way to recognize personal accomplishments and as a means of education by using the Prize to establish role models for others The first prize was given to Borlaug s former colleague M S Swaminathan in 1987 for his work in India The next year Swaminathan used the US 250 000 prize to start the MS Swaminathan Research Foundation for research on sustainable development Global stem rust and the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative edit In 2005 Borlaug with his former graduate student Ronnie Coffman convened an international expert panel in Kenya on the emerging threat of Ug99 in east Africa 56 The working group produced a report Sounding the Alarm on Global Stem Rust and their work led to the formation of the Global Rust Initiative In 2008 with funding from the Bill amp Melinda Gates Foundation the organization was re named the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative 57 Future of global farming and food supply edit The limited potential for land expansion for cultivation worried Borlaug who in March 2005 stated that we will have to double the world food supply by 2050 With 85 of future growth in food production having to come from lands already in use he recommends a multidisciplinary research focus to further increase yields mainly through increased crop immunity to large scale diseases such as the rust fungus which affects all cereals but rice His dream was to transfer rice immunity to cereals such as wheat maize sorghum and barley and transfer bread wheat proteins gliadin and glutenin to other cereals especially rice and maize 58 Borlaug believed that genetically modified organisms GMO were the only way to increase food production as the world runs out of unused arable land GMOs were not inherently dangerous because we ve been genetically modifying plants and animals for a long time Long before we called it science people were selecting the best breeds 59 In a review of Borlaug s 2000 publication entitled Ending world hunger the promise of biotechnology and the threat of antiscience zealotry 60 the authors argued that Borlaug s warnings were still true in 2010 61 GM crops are as natural and safe as today s bread wheat opined Dr Borlaug who also reminded agricultural scientists of their moral obligation to stand up to the antiscience crowd and warn policy makers that global food insecurity will not disappear without this new technology and ignoring this reality global food insecurity would make future solutions all the more difficult to achieve Rozwadowski and Kagale According to Borlaug Africa the former Soviet republics and the cerrado are the last frontiers After they are in use the world will have no additional sizable blocks of arable land left to put into production unless you are willing to level whole forests which you should not do So future food production increases will have to come from higher yields And though I have no doubt yields will keep going up whether they can go up enough to feed the population monster is another matter Unless progress with agricultural yields remains very strong the next century will experience sheer human misery that on a numerical scale will exceed the worst of everything that has come before 40 Besides increasing the worldwide food supply early in his career Borlaug stated that taking steps to decrease the rate of population growth will also be necessary to prevent food shortages In his Nobel Lecture of 1970 Borlaug stated Most people still fail to comprehend the magnitude and menace of the Population Monster If it continues to increase at the estimated present rate of two percent a year the world population will reach 6 5 billion by the year 2000 Currently with each second or tick of the clock about 2 2 additional people are added to the world population The rhythm of increase will accelerate to 2 7 3 3 and 4 0 for each tick of the clock by 1980 1990 and 2000 respectively unless man becomes more realistic and preoccupied about this impending doom The tick tock of the clock will continually grow louder and more menacing each decade Where will it all end 41 However some observers have suggested that by the 1990s Borlaug had changed his position on population control They point to a quote from the year 2000 in which he stated I now say that the world has the technology either available or well advanced in the research pipeline to feed on a sustainable basis a population of 10 billion people The more pertinent question today is whether farmers and ranchers will be permitted to use this new technology While the affluent nations can certainly afford to adopt ultra low risk positions and pay more for food produced by the so called organic methods the one billion chronically undernourished people of the low income food deficit nations cannot 62 However Borlaug remained on the advisory board of Population Media Center an organization working to stabilize world population until his death 63 Death editBorlaug died of lymphoma at the age of 95 on September 12 2009 in his Dallas home 2 64 4 Borlaug s children released a statement saying We would like his life to be a model for making a difference in the lives of others and to bring about efforts to end human misery for all mankind 65 The Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh and President of India Pratibha Patil paid tribute to Borlaug saying Borlaug s life and achievement are testimony to the far reaching contribution that one man s towering intellect persistence and scientific vision can make to human peace and progress 66 The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization FAO described Borlaug as a towering scientist whose work rivals that of the 20th century s other great scientific benefactors of humankind 67 and Kofi Annan former Secretary General of the United Nations said As we celebrate Dr Borlaug s long and remarkable life we also celebrate the long and productive lives that his achievements have made possible for so many millions of people around the world we will continue to be inspired by his enduring devotion to the poor needy and vulnerable of our world 68 Honors and awards edit nbsp President George W Bush speaks with National Medal of Science Laureates White House 2006 Dr Norman E Borlaug is second from left nbsp Dedication of the Norman Borlaug statue in the National Statuary Hall at the U S Capitol 2014In 1968 Borlaug received what he considered an especially satisfying tribute when the people of Ciudad Obregon where some of his earliest experiments were undertaken named a street after him Also in that year he became a member of the U S National Academy of Sciences In 1970 he was given an honorary doctorate by the Agricultural University of Norway 69 In 1970 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize by the Norwegian Nobel Committee for his contributions to the green revolution that was having such an impact on food production particularly in Asia and in Latin America 69 In 1970 he was awarded the Order of the Aztec Eagle by the Mexican government 70 In 1971 he was named a Distinguished Fellow of the National Academy of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine of Argentina 71 In 1971 he received the American Academy of Achievement s Golden Plate Award 72 In 1974 he was awarded a Peace Medal in the form of a dove carrying a wheat ear in its beak by Haryana Agricultural University Hisar India In 1975 he was named a Distinguished Fellow of the Iowa Academy of Science 73 In 1980 he received the S Roger Horchow Award for Greatest Public Service by a Private Citizen an award given out annually by Jefferson Awards 74 In 1980 he was elected honorary member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences In 1984 his name was placed in the National Agricultural Hall of Fame at the national center in Bonner Springs Kansas Also that year he was recognized for sustained service to humanity through outstanding contributions in plant breeding from the Governors Conference on Agriculture Innovations in Little Rock Arkansas Also in 1984 he received the Henry G Bennet Distinguished Service Award at commencement ceremonies at Oklahoma State University In 2005 he was given the Charles A Black Award for his contributions to public policy and the public understanding of science In 1986 Borlaug was inducted into the Scandinavian American Hall of Fame during Norsk Hostfest 75 Borlaug was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society ForMemRS in 1987 1 76 On August 19 2013 his statue was unveiled inside the ICAR s NASC Complex at New Delhi India 77 On March 25 2014 a statue of Borlaug at the United States Capitol was unveiled in a ceremony on the 100th anniversary of his birth This statue replaces the statue of James Harlan as one of the two statues given to the National Statuary Hall Collection by the state of Iowa Borlaug received the 1977 U S Presidential Medal of Freedom the 2002 Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences 78 the 2002 Rotary International Award for World Understanding and Peace and the 2004 National Medal of Science As of January 2004 Borlaug had received 49 honorary degrees from as many universities in 18 countries the most recent from Dartmouth College on June 12 2005 79 and was a foreign or honorary member of 22 international Academies of Sciences 80 In Iowa and Minnesota World Food Day October 16 is referred to as Norman Borlaug World Food Prize Day Throughout the United States it is referred to as World Food Prize Day In 2006 the Government of India conferred on him its second highest civilian award the Padma Vibhushan 81 He was awarded the Danforth Award for Plant Science by the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center St Louis Missouri in recognition of his lifelong commitment to increasing global agricultural production through plant science The stained glass World Peace Window at St Mark s Episcopal Cathedral in Minneapolis Minnesota depicts peace makers of the 20th century including Norman Borlaug 82 nbsp President George W Bush along with House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi congratulate Borlaug during the Congressional Gold Medal Ceremony on July 17 2007 In August 2006 Dr Leon Hesser published The Man Who Fed the World Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Norman Borlaug and His Battle to End World Hunger an account of Borlaug s life and work On August 4 the book received the 2006 Print of Peace award as part of International Read For Peace Week Borlaug is also the subject of the documentary film The Man Who Tried to Feed the World which first aired on American Experience on April 21 2020 83 84 On September 27 2006 the United States Senate by unanimous consent passed the Congressional Tribute to Dr Norman E Borlaug Act of 2006 The act authorizes that Borlaug be awarded America s highest civilian award the Congressional Gold Medal On December 6 2006 the House of Representatives passed the measure by voice vote President George Bush signed the bill into law on December 14 2006 and it became Public Law Number 109 395 85 According to the act the number of lives Dr Borlaug has saved is more than a billion people The act authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to strike and sell duplicates of the medal in bronze 86 He was presented with the medal on July 17 2007 87 Borlaug was a foreign fellow of the Bangladesh Academy of Sciences 88 The Borlaug Dialogue Norman E Borlaug International Symposium is named in his honour Books edit nbsp Borlaug with United States Secretary of Agriculture Ann M Veneman near the birthday cake prepared for his 90th birthdayThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items May 2019 The Green Revolution Peace and Humanity 1970 Nobel Lecture Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo Norway December 11 1970 Wheat in the Third World 1982 Authors Haldore Hanson Norman E Borlaug and R Glenn Anderson Boulder Colorado Westview Press ISBN 0 86531 357 1 Land use food energy and recreation 1983 Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies ISBN 0 940222 07 8 Feeding a human population that increasingly crowds a fragile planet 1994 Mexico City ISBN 968 6201 34 3 Norman Borlaug on World Hunger 1997 Edited by Anwar Dil San Diego Islamabad Lahore Bookservice International 499 pages ISBN 0 9640492 3 6 The Green Revolution Revisited and the Road Ahead 2000 Anniversary Nobel Lecture Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo Norway September 8 2000 Ending World Hunger The Promise of Biotechnology and the Threat of Antiscience Zealotry 2000 Plant Physiology October 2000 Vol 124 pp 487 90 duplicate Feeding a World of 10 Billion People The TVA IFDC Legacy International Fertilizer Development Center 2003 ISBN 0 88090 144 6 Prospects for world agriculture in the twenty first century 2004 Norman E Borlaug Christopher R Dowswell Published in Sustainable agriculture and the international rice wheat system ISBN 0 8247 5491 3 Foreword to The Frankenfood Myth How Protest and Politics Threaten the Biotech Revolution 2004 Henry I Miller Gregory Conko ISBN 0 275 97879 6 Borlaug Norman E June 27 2007 Sixty two years of fighting hunger personal recollections Euphytica 157 3 287 97 doi 10 1007 s10681 007 9480 9 S2CID 2927707 References edit a b c Phillips R L 2013 Norman Ernest Borlaug 25 March 1914 12 September 2009 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 59 59 72 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2013 0012 S2CID 75211546 a b Nobel Prize winner Norman Borlaug dies at 95 Associated Press September 13 2009 Retrieved September 17 2012 a b MacAray David October 15 2013 The Man Who Saved a Billion Lives The Huffington Post a b Swaminathan M S 2009 Obituary Norman E Borlaug 1914 2009 Plant scientist who transformed global food production Nature 461 7266 894 Bibcode 2009Natur 461 894S doi 10 1038 461894a ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 19829366 S2CID 36572472 Borlaug father of Green Revolution dead DAWN com September 14 2009 Retrieved May 27 2015 Scott Kilman and Roger Thurow Father of Green Revolution Dies The Wall Street Journal Retrieved June 5 2013 Dowswell C October 15 2009 Norman Ernest Borlaug 1914 2009 Science 326 5951 381 doi 10 1126 science 1182211 PMID 19833952 S2CID 36826133 a b Father of the Green Revolution He Helped Feed the World www scienceheroes com The phrase over a billion lives saved is often cited by others in reference to Norman Borlaug s work Hearings Agriculture senate gov Archived from the original on November 6 2011 Norman E Borlaug Extended Biography www worldfoodprize org Retrieved December 12 2023 a b Avery Dennis T 2011 Winning the Food Race The Brown Journal of World Affairs 18 1 107 118 ISSN 1080 0786 Easterbrook Gregg January 1997 Forgotten benefactor of humanity The Atlantic Retrieved October 25 2016 UN food agency mourns death of champion against hunger news un org September 13 2009 Retrieved December 13 2023 Enriquez Juan September 2007 Why Can t We Grow New Energy TED Retrieved September 18 2012 Dr Norman Borlaug nwhof org Retrieved December 12 2023 Dr Norman Borlaug Iowa Wrestling Hall of Fame Retrieved December 12 2023 State Historical Society of Iowa 2002 FY03 HRDP REAP Grant Application Approval Iowa Rep Tom Latham Pays Tribute to Dr Borlaug The World Food Prize March 20 2008 Archived from the original on July 3 2008 Retrieved September 18 2012 a b University of Minnesota 2005 Borlaug and the University of Minnesota Archived from the original on March 10 2005 Retrieved June 18 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e f g h i j k Stuertz Mark December 5 2002 Green Giant Dallas Observer Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Norman Borlaug s Wife Dies at 95 Associated Press March 8 2007 Archived from the original on September 23 2013 Retrieved September 18 2012 An assistant to the family says she fell recently and never recovered Wright Angus 2005 The Death of Ramon Gonzalez Davidson M G 1997 An Abundant Harvest Interview with Norman Borlaug Recipient Nobel Peace Prize 1970 Common Ground August 12 Borlaug Norman E 1974 In defence of DDT and other pesticides Pesticides Bombay 8 5 14 19 S2CID 53000872 AGRIS id US201303170850 a b Rajaram Sanjaya September 8 2011 Norman Borlaug The Man I Worked With and Knew Annual Review of Phytopathology Annual Reviews 49 1 17 30 doi 10 1146 annurev phyto 072910 095308 ISSN 0066 4286 PMID 21370972 S2CID 34962814 Borlaug Norman E Mankind And Civilization At Another Crossroad Speech UN FAO Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations 7th McDougall Memorial Lecture About Us World Cultural Council Retrieved November 8 2016 Borlaug Norman E October 1 2000 Ending World Hunger The Promise of Biotechnology and the Threat of Antiscience Zealotry Plant Physiology American Society of Plant Biologists OUP 124 2 487 490 doi 10 1104 pp 124 2 487 ISSN 1532 2548 PMC 1539278 PMID 11027697 a b c d Brown L R 1970 Nobel Peace Prize developer of high yield wheat receives award Norman Ernest Borlaug Science 30 October 1970 170 957 518 19 a b University of Minnesota 2005 Borlaug s Work in Mexico Archived from the original on December 26 2004 Retrieved June 19 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Miller Henry I January 2012 Norman Borlaug The Genius Behind The Green Revolution Forbes Archived from the original on January 19 2012 Borlaug N E 1953 New approach to the breeding of wheat varieties resistant to Puccinia graminis tritici Phytopathology 43 467 NAID 10018742476 AGB 301 Principles and Methods of Plant Breeding Tamil Nadu Agricultural University Retiz L P 1970 New wheats and social progress Science 169 3949 952 55 Bibcode 1970Sci 169 952R doi 10 1126 science 169 3949 952 PMID 5432698 S2CID 21443218 Hedden P 2003 The genes of the Green Revolution Trends in Genetics 19 1 5 9 doi 10 1016 s0168 9525 02 00009 4 PMID 12493241 University of Minnesota 2005 The Beginning of the Green Revolution Archived from the original on December 27 2004 Retrieved June 22 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Erlich Paul The Population Bomb 1968 Norman E Borlaug Ph D Biography and Interview achievement org American Academy of Achievement a b c d e f Easterbrook G 1997 Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity The Atlantic Monthly a b Borlaug N E 1972 Nobel Lecture December 11 1970 From Nobel Lectures Peace 1951 1970 Frederick W Haberman Ed Elsevier Publishing Company Amsterdam Nobel Lecture The Nobel Peace Prize 1970 Norman Borlaug nobelprize org Angelsen A and D Kaimowitz 2001 The Role of Agricultural Technologies in Tropical Deforestation Agricultural Technologies and Tropical Deforestation PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 29 2005 Retrieved July 17 2005 CABI Publishing New York Borlaug N E 2002 The green revolution revisited and the road ahead Stockholm Sweden Nobelprize org https www nobelprize org uploads 2018 06 borlaug lecture pdf Borlaug Norman Garrett Peter December 18 1999 Between the Tynes Chronicles of the Future Program 6 Earth wind amp fire The Weekend Australian Cockburn Alexander June 29 2003 Corporate Interests Keep World s Poor Hungry Sunday Business Post Archived from the original on January 12 2010 Retrieved May 27 2015 Billions served Interview with Reason Magazine April 2000 Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum 2002 Four Iowans Who Fed The World Norman Borlaug Geneticist at the Wayback Machine archive index Tierney John May 19 2008 Greens and Hunger TierneyLab Putting Ideas in Science to the Test The New York Times Retrieved February 13 2009 Iowans Who Fed The World Norman Borlaug Geneticist AgBioWorld October 26 2002 Retrieved August 8 2011 a b c Vidal John April 1 2014 Norman Borlaug humanitarian hero or menace to society The Guardian Retrieved October 6 2023 Press Robert June 29 1994 Borlaug sowing Green Revolution among African leaders Christian Science Monitor Retrieved September 6 2009 The Carter Center Norman Borlaug Senior Consultant in Agriculture Archived from the original on August 21 2008 Retrieved July 17 2008 The Carter Center The Carter Center Agriculture Program Retrieved July 17 2008 The Carter Center May 2 2007 Exhibit to Highlight Progress For Peace Health Human Rights Retrieved July 17 2008 Dr Norman Borlaug BGRI Borlaug Global Rust Initiative Retrieved June 24 2022 Dr Norman Borlaug BGRI Retrieved December 9 2020 The Murugappa Group 2005 Food for Thought Archived December 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Norman Borlaug genetic modification can feed the world Chron com July 13 2008 Borlaug N E 2000 Ending world hunger the promise of biotechnology and the threat of antiscience zealotry Plant Physiology 124 2 487 90 doi 10 1104 pp 124 2 487 PMC 1539278 PMID 11027697 Rozwadowski Kevin Kagale Sateesh n d Global Food Security The Role of Agricultural Biotechnology Commentary PDF Saskatoon Saskatchewan Saskatoon Research Centre Agriculture and Agri Food Canada archived from the original PDF on September 24 2015 retrieved January 12 2014 Conko Greg The Man Who Fed the World Openmarket org September 13 2009 Population Media Center 2008 Annual Report PDF Populationmedia org 2008 Archived from the original PDF on February 24 2021 Retrieved April 22 2011 Nobel Prize winning scientist Norman Borlaug father of the green revolution dies at age 95 Star Tribune permanent dead link Associated Press in Dallas September 13 2009 Norman Borlaug the Nobel winner who fed the world dies aged 95 The Guardian London Retrieved September 15 2009 PM pays tribute to Father of Green Revolution Borlaug Rediff September 14 2009 Retrieved September 15 2009 UN food agency pays tribute to father of Green Revolution United Nations September 14 2009 Retrieved September 15 2009 Tributes to Dr Norman E Borlaug from around the world World Food Prize September 14 2009 Archived from the original on October 3 2009 Retrieved September 15 2009 a b The Nobel Peace Prize 1970 NobelPrize org Awards CIMMYT July 24 2023 Retrieved December 13 2023 BORLAUG Norman E Ing Agr Dr November 9 2011 Archived from the original on August 12 2022 Retrieved April 3 2021 Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement achievement org American Academy of Achievement List of Distinguished Fellows of the Iowa Academy of Science Archived from the original on May 14 2009 National Jefferson Awards Foundation Archived from the original on November 24 2010 Retrieved May 30 2017 SAHF Inductees hostfest com Norsk Hostfest October 19 2020 Fellowship of the Royal Society 1660 2015 London Royal Society Archived from the original on October 15 2015 Shri Sharad Pawar Unveiled the Statue of Dr Borlaug at New Delhi Indian Council of Agricultural Research icar org in Archived from the original on May 6 2016 Retrieved May 30 2017 Public Welfare Award National Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved February 18 2011 Biographical background on 2005 Dartmouth honorary degree recipients Norman E Borlaug Doctor of Science dartmouth edu Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved August 24 2009 Dr Norman E Borlaug s Curriculum Vitae agbioworld org Retrieved May 30 2017 Father of India s Green Revolution given Padma Vibhushan Rediff com August 24 2006 Bjordal J Cathedral Peace Window honors Dr Norman Borlaug and Jimmy Carter Journal of the American Chestnut Foundation vol 18 no 2 Fall 2004 p 9 Retrieved September 6 2009 American Experience The Man Who Tried to Feed the World PBS org Retrieved December 17 2022 Blakemore Erin How unintended consequences unraveled a legendary agricultural achievement The Washington Post Saturday April 18 2020 Retrieved December 17 2022 An Act To award a congressional gold medal to Dr Norman E Borlaug Retrieved May 30 2017 The Dr Norman Borlaug Bronze Medal The United States Mint Retrieved February 16 2011 nels2371 May 18 2016 Alumnus Norman Borlaug receives National Medal of Science Retrieved May 30 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link List of Fellows of Bangladesh Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on April 15 2010 Further reading editAndy Andrews 2010 The Boy Who Changed The World eBook Juvenile Nonfiction Thomas Nelson ISBN 978 1418562519 Bickel Lennard 1974 Facing starvation Norman Borlaug and the fight against hunger Pleasantville N Y Reader s Digest Press distributed by Dutton ISBN 978 0 88349 015 0 Hesser Leon 2006 The Man Who Fed the World Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Norman Borlaug and His Battle to End World Hunger Durban House ISBN 978 1 930754 90 4 Cullather Nick 2010 The Hungry World America s Cold War Battle against Poverty in Asia Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 05078 5 Rajaram S 2011 Norman Borlaug The Man I Worked with and Knew Annual Review of Phytopathology 49 17 30 doi 10 1146 annurev phyto 072910 095308 PMID 21370972 Vietmeyer Noel 2013 Our Daily Bread the Essential Norman Borlaug Bracing Books ISBN 978 0 578 09555 4 Vietmeyer Noel 2009 Borlaug Volume 1 Right off the Farm 1914 1944 Bracing Books ISBN 978 0 578 04125 4 Vietmeyer Noel 2010 Borlaug Volume 2 Wheat Whisperer 1944 1959 Bracing Books ISBN 978 0 578 03856 8 Vietmeyer Noel 2010 Borlaug Volume 3 Bread Winner 1960 1969 Bracing Books ISBN 978 057 806920 3 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Recognizing the Efforts of Agronomist and Nobel Laureate Norman Borlaug nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Norman Borlaug nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Norman Borlaug Appearances on C SPAN Norman E Borlaug papers University Archives University of Minnesota Twin Cities The Pioneer of the Green Revolution Norman Borlaug on Nobelprize org nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Norman Borlaug amp oldid 1207070535, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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