For Immediate Release

2014 World Food Prize Honors Wheat Researcher

The 2014 World Food Prize was presented to Dr. Sanjaya Rajaram in Des Moines, Iowa on Thursday for his scientific research that led to a prodigious increase in world wheat production. His breakthrough breeding technologies have had a far-reaching and significant impact in providing more nutritious food around the globe and alleviating world hunger.

Dr. Rajaram is the former colleague of the Prize’s founder Dr. Norman Borlaug and worked closely with Dr. Borlaug throughout his career in genetics and agricultural science.

“It is inspiring to see a wheat researcher awarded the 2014 World Food Prize. It is even more exciting to meet the young innovators and grower-leaders of tomorrow and see that the future of wheat research and Dr. Borlaug’s legacy is in good hands,” commented NAWG first vice president Brett Blankenship, a wheat grower from Washtucna, Wash. who was in attendance the evening of the ceremony. “This has been a great year for advancing wheat, all around the world, and I believe that this next year will be even better.”

Thanks to wheat research breakthroughs, wheat is a staple food for people worldwide, accounting for 20 percent of the world’s caloric intake.

As a the winner of the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize, Dr. Borlaug understood the value that a sustainable and flexible food supply played in ensuring peace for an increasingly populous world. This year marks the 100th anniversary of Dr. Borlaug’s birth. He is credited with sparking the Green Revolution and saving more than 1 billion people from starvation through his development of high yielding, semi-dwarf wheat.

Dr. Borlaug created the World Food Prize to honor future agricultural visionaries and heroes. Details, history of the award and the 2014 Laureate can be found here.

 

About NAWG

NAWG is the primary policy representative in Washington D.C. for wheat growers, working to ensure a better future for America’s growers, the industry and the general public. NAWG works with a team of 20 state wheat grower organizations to benefit the wheat industry at the national level. From their offices on Capitol Hill, NAWG’s staff members are in constant contact with state association representatives, NAWG grower leaders, Members of Congress, Congressional staff members, Administration officials and the public.