Q&A from the October 17, 2020 Webinar
Biofortification is a process of increasing the density of minerals and vitamins in a food crop through conventional plant breeding, transgenic techniques, or agronomic practices. Biofortified staple food crops, when consumed regularly substituting one-for-one with non-biofortified staple food crops, will generate measurable improvements in human nutrition and health. This paper describes the progress made in disseminating, testing, and developing biofortified food crops with both conventional plant breeding and genetic engineering. Food Biofortification—Reaping the Benefits of Science to Overcome Hidden Hunger is a paper in the series on The Need for Agricultural Innovation to Sustainably Feed the World by 2050.
IP69, October 2020, 40 pp. Available free online and in print (fee for shipping/handling).
Publication Impact Report – FINAL (November 2022)
Task Force Chair
Howarth Bouis
Task Force Authors
Ekin Birol
Erick Boy
Brian Gannon
Jere Haas
Jan Low
Saurabh Mehta
Kristina Michaux
Task Force Authors
Bho Mudyahoto
Wolfgang Pfeiffer
Matin Qaim
Torbert Rocheford
Chelsea Reinberg
Alexander Stein
Simon Strobbe
Dominique Van Der Straeten
Vincent Verbeecke
Ross Welch
Task Force Reviewers
Michael Lipton
Hans De Steur
Task Force Board Liaison
Nancy Reichert