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Steve Jobs legacy takes centre stage at #ifadgc

Posted by Roxanna Samii Wednesday, February 15, 2012 2 comments

IFAD's social reporting team - Yes this is a DREAM TEAM!
The readers of this blog know that #ifadgc promises to be an interactive event thanks to a number of social media components and the wonderful social reporting team. This dream team will keep the outside world informed through blogs, tweets, posting interviews and pictures on the following IFAD social media channels.

This  blogpost is about two out-of-the-box, innovative and open-minded colleagues working in our IT division: Marcello Barnaba  (@vjt) and Amedeo Paglione (@amedeo).

Amedeo and Marcello at work!!
Marcello is the mind behind IFAD's cool webcasting application which beats Livestream. Last September, during the Second Global AgriKnowledge Share Fair (#sfrome), he got a standing ovation for this very application. Since September, Marcello together with other colleagues have further refined the application. A number of our sister UN agencies consider this application as  a model to follow!!!

Amedeo is one of those folks who has vision. He is one of our best partners in crime when it comes to introducing innovative approaches. And he played a crucial and instrumental role in bringing the web2.0 revolution to IFAD.

Against all odds, Marcello and Amedeo introduced us to new ways of computing by adopting opensource paradigm. And guess what, they broke the tabu and introduced Mac computers. To say they are early adopters is an under statement. Their mantra is THREE apples - iPhone, iPad, Macbook-  a day, keep a doctor away.

On 23 February at 10 a.m. CET, Amedeo and Marcello will be two of the many social reporters who will be reporting live from Bill Gates centre stage and share with the rest of the world Mr Gates perspectives on the importance of agriculture and how sustainable productivity improvements can reduce poverty in developing countries.

We encourage YOU to follow us via webcast and  interact with the prominent guests and panellists on Twitter and Facebook using #ifadgc hashtag. 

Please send us your questions and comments for the various panellists, including Bill Gates.

Then you should follow the Side Event of the Famers’ Forum on “Strengthening farmer organizations in Sub-Saharan Africa – the Farmer Organization Support Centre in Africa”.

Farmer organizations (FOs) in Africa play a key role to promote new opportunities to maximize their gains in lucrative agricultural value chains. However, these prospects depend on their ability to identify emerging opportunities and to meet the greater competitive requirements. Farmers’ Organisations have made significant progress, but there are still some major gaps and challenges.

The Farmer Organization Support Centre in Africa (FOSCA), recently established by Alliance for Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), seeks to develop the managerial, organizational and technical capacity of FOs by linking them with service providers that focus on demand-driven and income-enhancing services.

We are pleased to have FOSCA with us here in Rome to lead the discussion on how engage and dialogue with participants, especially with FOs and other key stakeholders, on opportunities and challenges of working with FOs; strengthen their position in lucrative agricultural value chains; facilitate members’ access to better prices and incomes; and promote a more favourable environment for smallholder farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Venue:
Thursday, 23 February 2012 - 16:30-18:30

What does it take to orchestrate a successful and cool event? Planning and preparation are two fundamental pillars for a memorable event. And do not underestimate the importance of flexibility, ability to cope with all the unexpected, thinking the unthinkable and most importantly adapting to any situation and unforeseen circumstances.


As we are gearing up for #ifadgc, we'll run back stories on the "GC making" and introduce you to some of our colleagues.

Our first guest is Andreina Mauro. In this interview, Andreina tells the story of how the format and content  IFAD Governing Councils have evolved over time and how we have shifted our focus from institutional matters to more a conversation between and among, world leaders, policy makers and opinion leaders.




In the next series, we'll introduce to you to IFAD social reporters who will keep the outside world informed through blogs, tweets, and interviews and pictures posted on IFAD’s social media pages.

The final countdown: 10 more days to #ifadgc

Posted by Roxanna Samii Sunday, February 12, 2012 0 comments

What is #ifadgc? Well, #ifadgc is IFAD's annual event - better known as the Governing Council. On 22 and 23 February 2012,  our member states,  partners, stakeholders, policymakers, world leaders, global movers and shakers, and most importantly the people we work with and for will come together to discuss and debate on  strategic rural development issues.

This year, as the world belatedly turns its attention to the pressing issues of environmental degradation, resource scarcity and climate change, we will focus our attention on sustainability and more specifically on Sustainable smallholder agriculture: Feeding the world, protecting the planet.

And this year more than ever, YOU - our virtual audience - can shape the conversation. Make sure you follow @ifadnews on  Twitter  and join our  Facebook page. A dedicated team of social reporters will keep the outside world informed through blogs, tweets, interviews and pictures.

To stimulate the conversation, YOUR live tweets will be displayed on the Twitter wall in the Plenary Hall, and in our building's lobby. We encourage you to your ideas, views, insights and questions via social media channels and on this blog. Join the  #ifadgc conversation and follow the high-level panels, centre-stage events and the regional events via webcast. Our webcasting application is fully integrated with Twitter and Facebook. Dare I say, it is better than Livestream :)

Getting close and personal
In the coming days, you'll get to know the social reporting team. They are indeed a DREAM TEAM!!!

We'll be sharing the backstory of what it takes to orchestrate such an event. You have to know that this year - we too have been victims of climate change - and were faced with the unusual challenge of heavy snow storm in Rome.

The readers of this blog know that snow is an unusual sight for the Eternal City..... So the beautiful snowflakes falling from the sky, are a great source of excitement, but also source of infinite inconvenience..... More of this to come.

The movers and shakers taking centre-stage at #ifadgc

So who are the global movers and shakers taking centre stage at #ifadgc? Here is a run down:

22 February 2012
At 9.15 a.m. H.E. Paul Kagame (@paulkagame), President of the Republic of Rwanda, H.E. Mario Monti, Prime Minister of the Italian Republic (@presMarioMonti) and IFAD President Kanayo F. Nwanze (@knwanze) will deliver keynote speeches.

At 10 a.m. (CET) Nik Gowing, international broadcaster, will host a high-level panel to discuss and debate what it will take to ensure food security while protecting the environment. Panellists will share their views on different farming methods. They will highlight the importance of building institutions, investing in research and technology, and adopting and adapting new practices.

At 3.00p.m. (CET) Dr Lindiwe Majele Sibanda, the Chief Executive Officer of Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network,  will engage in a conversation with Naga Munchetty, international broadcaster, on “What promise will Rio herald for agriculture?”

And this is just the first day. Here is what we have in store for your on the second day:


23 February 2102
At 9.45 a.m., H.E. Andrea Riccardi, the Italian Minister for International Cooperation and Integration Policies, will deliver a keynote speech.

At 10 a.m. Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, will take centre stage to share his perspectives, with questions to follow from international broadcaster, Isha Sesay. Mr Gates will discuss the importance of agriculture and how sustainable productivity improvements can reduce poverty in developing countries. He will challenge both global players and national governments to adopt a new approach to supporting smallholder farmers.

At 11 a.m. Naga Munchetty will host a high-level panel composed of policymakers. The panel will discuss how to create a sustainable future for smallholder farmers.

Mark your calendars
I hope you are as excited as the rest of us and have blocked your calendar on 22-23 February with #ifadgc. We look forward to receiving your questions and comments for our questions and  interacting with you in the coming days.

Watch this space and follow us on Twitter  and  Facebook.

The growing role of "drones" in agriculture

Posted by Robert Meins Wednesday, February 8, 2012 2 comments

For those who follow my work on the topics of remittances, migration and development a warning; for once you will hear nothing about any of these topics from me. This post does however, combine my work at the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), with another fascination of mine: designing, testing and flying large remote control aircraft.

While these aircraft may seem like large toys to the uninitiated, technology has advanced to the point where autopilot systems, GPS tracking, small cameras and arrays of transmitters can allow you to fly as far as 50 kilomiters from the point of launch, all while following the flight on a screen as if you were piloting a real aircraft. The vast number of sensors and cameras carried by what are called unmanned areal vehicles (UAVs) can be used for many purposes. Most of you will be all too familiar with the military and intelligence applications of their larger brothers such as Global Hawk and Predator, but there are also a host of civilian applications for the technology. UAVs for instance, can make detailed 3D maps of fields, forests, moutains, rivers and lakes and can play important roles in everything from detecting forest fires to monitoring crop growth. Today I discovered a BBC article that is a great introduction to some of the new applications of this technology. It doesn't take a great deal of imagination to see that UAVs can also offer a cost-effective solution for monitoring vast areas of land in developing countries.

The article provides a good introduction to what is possible, and the fact that the BBC is reporting on the topic highlights just how serious the contribution of these "model aircraft" is being taken!


Spying on Europe’s farms with satellites and drones

Source: BBC
By: Laurence Peter
Bales of hay in Wiltshire, UK - file pic Farmers who claim more EU subsidies than they should, or who break Common Agricultural Policy rules, are now more likely to be caught out by a camera in the sky than an inspector calling with a clipboard. How do they feel about being watched from above?

Imagine a perfect walk in the country, a few years from now - tranquillity, clean air, birdsong in the trees and hedgerows, growing crops swaying in the breeze.

Suddenly a model plane swoops overhead.

But there is no-one around manipulating radio controls. This is not a toy, but a drone on a photographic mission.

Meanwhile, hundreds of kilometres up in space, the same patch of land is being photographed by a satellite, which clearly pinpoints individual trees and animals.
What is there to spy on here? No secret military installations, just farmland.

But Europe's farms cost taxpayers billions of euros in subsidies each year, and EU agricultural inspectors are turning to technology to improve their patchy record on preventing fraud and waste.

Satellites have already been in use for several years, and drones are currently undergoing trials.

Scanning a farm with a satellite costs about one third as much as sending an inspector on a field visit - £115 ($180; 150 euros) rather than £310 ($490; 400 euros), says the UK's Rural Payments Agency (RPA), which is responsible for disbursing the subsidies in the UK and checking for irregularities.

"The RPA follows up only on those claims where there is some doubt about accuracy, and then only at the specific fields for which the doubt exists," the RPA says. "This saves time, lifts the burden on farmers and reduces cost to the taxpayer."

Satellites can rapidly cover a huge area in detail and quickly return to photograph it again if necessary.

In 2010, about 70% of the total required controls on farm payments in the EU were done by satellites, which photographed more than 210,000 sq km (81,000 sq miles) of land in all.

But they are not infallible. Austria does not use them, on the grounds that the shadows cast by very mountainous terrain sometimes make satellite images inaccurate.
And Scotland, unlike the rest of the UK, decided against satellites "because of the difficulty of getting enough clear weather for flyovers", a Scottish government spokeswoman told the BBC.

Many things in the countryside are constantly changing and when the satellite passes over, "the animals may be in a field or in a barn - you can't count the numbers very well", says Roland Randall, an English farmer and environmental researcher in Cambridgeshire. "When planners looked at the aerial photo records of our farm they thought we had an additional building without permission, but it was actually a haystack," he told the BBC.

The satellite checks are done partly to produce accurate maps of farms, showing clearly the areas eligible for subsidies.

But farmers these days have to keep their land in "good agricultural and environmental condition" to qualify for subsidies, so images also reveal whether the farmer is complying with the rules on hedges and ponds, say, or buffer strips around arable fields.


Spotting erosion from satellite images The monitoring is not always to spot infringements or illegal activities. Satellite images can help identify problems such as erosion. Farmers can then be asked to change their methods to prevent further damage. In the above images, overproduction and deep ploughing in clay earth meant rain washed soil away.

A farmer who breaks the rules risks losing 3% of his or her direct payment - and more if it is a repeat infringement.

There have been few prosecutions in the UK based on satellite evidence, says Ray Purdy, a senior law researcher at University College London (UCL) specialising in satellite monitoring.

One case in the UK was dropped in 2001 because a farmer proved that he had planted a linseed crop, even though the satellite image appeared to show bare earth. The sparse young plants had failed to show up against the bright reflection off chalk downland. This could be the kind of situation where a drone - an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) - would come in useful.

Drones are best known for their role as remote-control killers in Afghanistan, but supporters see a role for smaller and much simpler drones in agricultural monitoring. They can get up close and take sharp photographs - and unlike satellites, which always look directly down, drones can get an angled view of their subject.

They are currently being tried out in vineyards in the south of France, to check that "grubbing up" of vines is done legally and ecologically.

Wine-growers get as much as 10,000 euros ($13,000; £8,300) per hectare in subsidies for digging up uncompetitive vines - a scheme to prevent new EU "wine lakes" caused by overproduction.

"There has to be 100% control, as it's a huge amount of money," says Philippe Loudjani, an agronomist at the Joint Research Centre, the European Commission's main satellite monitoring hub in Ispra, northern Italy.

"The French are testing to see if the drones need to go up to 10cm resolution - to see what accuracy is required."

Graphic showing use of Atmos 6 UAV (drone)

Drones are also being tested in Italy, and are already in use on a small scale in Spain's Catalonia region, where authorities say their 25cm and 12.5cm resolution photos are ideal for inspecting the small landholdings with mixed crops that are typical of the Mediterranean.

The EU is hurrying to develop a "strategy for Unmanned Aircraft Systems", which would see the existing very tough restrictions on the use of civilian drones in Europe relaxed.

A discussion paper prepared for a European Commission workshop in Brussels this week, envisages their use not only in crop or farm monitoring, but also terrain cartography, goods transport, monitoring of borders, the fight against illegal immigration and drug trafficking, and intervention in natural or industrial disasters.

"They can also be sent to deliver rescue packages to ship crews in danger at sea," it adds.
However, in the short term it's likely that UAVs will only be widely approved for use within line of sight of an operator and at a distance of no more than 500m, which limits their value for agricultural inspection.

And what about the privacy issue?

Ben Hayes of the campaign group Statewatch worries that Europe is rushing into the use of drones without sufficient public discussion.

"We would accept the argument that there are lots of things they can be useful for, but ... the questions about what is acceptable and how people feel about drones hovering over their farmland or their demonstration - these debates are not taking place," he says.

Ray Purdy of UCL surveyed 202 farmers in the UK, and 428 in Australia - where satellites are routinely used to monitor land use, especially vegetation clearance - and found that only about a quarter in Australia and a third in the UK were against satellite monitoring.

Some farmers voiced concerns about invasion of privacy, but many said remote sensing was preferable to inspectors on their land taking up their time.

A majority in the UK also agreed that the satellites would help to deter fraud.
Rob Allan, a farmer in Warwickshire, said "it's modern life really - I don't think there's anything you can do about it".

Fourteen highly motivated Country Programme Assistants have not been scared by cold temperatures and snow fall alerts to join the training at Headquarters in Rome to familiarise themselves with the programme management, workflows, procedures, budget, and web-based tools in IFAD.

IFAD’s field presence is expanding and new colleagues have come on board. The two Africa Divisions have taken the lead to organise for the first time a training session for Country Programme Assistants. Headquarter-based Programme and Administrative Assistants from both divisions have become trainers to provide their support to colleagues in the field to better understand the various systems such as Peoplesoft, xdesk, ERMS, WATS, PSR online, RIMS, PPMS…. Colleagues from the Programme Management Department, Human Resources Division, Administrative Services Division, Controllers’ and Financial Services Division have also helped to render this training programme a success.

Special thanks to Shaun Ryan and Betty Retta for coordinating this training event.

We all learn from experience. In fact, real learning is impossible without some degree of trial and error. But when IFAD and its partners invest in projects to help rural households lift themselves out of extreme poverty, mistakes can be costly in both financial and human terms. That’s why it’s crucial, from the start, to have tools at hand that effectively measure the impact of every intervention.

Herder reviews pasture rotation map with a project
evaluation officer in Mongolia. ©IFAD/Susan Beccio
Impact evaluation was in the spotlight at IFAD headquarters this week during a seminar organized by IFAD and the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). It was the second in a series of research-oriented events co-sponsored by the two organizations.

While the content of the seminar was highly technical, even non-experts could grasp the importance of its key question: How can we make the best possible use of the resources we spend on development?

A credible case for support
Speaking by videoconference from Washington, DC, Maximo Torero, Director of IFPRI’s Markets, Trades and Institutions Division, offered a detailed strategy in response to that question. Answering it, he said, means assessing not only how cost-effective programmes are, but also how well they generate economic development and reduce poverty for beneficiaries on the ground.

Only by gathering evidence-based knowledge about what works, Torero argued, can aid agencies make a credible case for more donor support.

“It’s important to identify which interventions make sense and which ones don’t, and why,” he said.

Objective and systematic
Torero’s rapid-fire explanation of impact evaluation covered a lot of ground, as did the ensuing question-and-answer period. (Watch the full seminar here.) Following are a few of the presentation’s main themes.
  • Causal links. Over the past decade – and especially amidst global recession and fiscal constraints – governments and other donors have increasingly demanded proof of the impact made by development policies and programmes. To meet these demands, aid organizations must clearly identify the causal pathways between interventions and results, and systematically gauge the impact of their work.
  • Before and after. Objective impact evaluation hinges on a difficult task: determining what would have happened if the project in question never existed. This requires a comparison of indicators for two separate groups – beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries – both before and after the intervention. 
  • Control groups. Controlled trials are one approach to making such comparisons. The trials compare randomly selected members of a beneficiary group with their counterparts in a non-beneficiary control group. There are other methods of comparison, as well. No approach is perfect, but each can be helpful in addressing the issue of attribution – that is, finding out whether changes in the status of beneficiaries are attributable to a particular intervention.
  • Outcomes vs. impacts. When choosing indicators to be used for evaluation, it’s important to recognize the distinction between the outcomes and the impacts of a development project. A rural electrification initiative, for example, might result in improved indoor air quality, as households use fewer polluting fuels for cooking, lighting and heating. In this case, better air quality is the outcome. From a human development standpoint, however, the relevant impact could be a reduction in respiratory diseases and deaths among children under five.
  • Design for success. To ensure an accurate assessment and to reduce costs, the impact evaluation should be designed at the inception of a project, not imposed after the project is already operational. Optimally, interventions can be evaluated at the pilot stage and then brought to scale on the basis of a rigorous analysis of lessons learned early on.
Torero returned to this last point several times during the seminar, stressing the need for “external validity” in project design and implementation. Even with large, complex projects, he said, “you need to have some testing at the pilot level to understand which interventions have the greatest impact. We can try things and see if they’re working, and once we’re sure, scale them up.”

Evaluation is, of course, simply a means to an end. For IFAD, the ultimate goal is to make a tangible, positive impact on the lives of poor smallholder farmers in the developing world. As Torero put it: “We’re not looking for a silver bullet. We’re trying to get people out of poverty on a sustainable basis.”

Missed the seminar? Watch the recording.

PowerPoint presentation