Regional symposium on ‘Transforming rice grain quality and nutrition in South Asia’
View(s):Varanasi, India – The International Rice Research Institute’s South Asia Regional Centre (IRRI SARC) recently organised a regional symposium on ‘Transforming Rice Grain Quality and Nutrition in South Asia’, inviting private sector representatives from the seed industry, milling, crop protection, agri digital and genomic services, traders, and the FMCG sector. The day-long event saw private sector leaders from India, Bangladesh, and Nepal engaging with IRRI scientists.
“IRRI SARC through its suite of modern laboratories and training facilities is advancing the exchange of technical know-how in rice research, to encourage collaboration between partners in the region, as well as for value addition to rice and rice-based agri-food systems. By collaborating with the public and private sector we will be able to optimise efforts in rice science, research, nutritional enhancement, and market linkages,” said Dr. Arvind Kumar, IRRI SARC Director, said in a media release on the event.
IRRI Tech Transfer furthered IRRI SARC’s objectives by detailing products and services that can facilitate collaboration with private sector organisations, while aligning with IRRI’s mission goals. Elaborating on the private sector’s larger role in the rice value chain, Dr. Nafees Meah, Regional Representative for IRRI-South Asia, said, “There is a need for building resilient rice-based systems that can adapt to climate change and water stresses like drought and floods. Agriculture is transitioning from subsistence to commercial farming across South Asia. Therefore the private sector has an important role for delivering the Sustainable Development Goals and in particular better nutrition for consumers.”
Dr. Ajay Panchbhai, Senior Manager of IRRI Tech Transfer said, “IRRI, through IRRI SARC’s Centre of Excellence in Rice Value Addition (CERVA), is offering validation and analytical services for assessing rice grain quality; models for research and development collaboration by way of a consortium; training programmes and similarly grain quality and nutritional consultancy services to private sector partners in South Asia.”
A state-of-the-art research facility, IRRI SARC fosters South-South cooperation in rice and rice science as a platform for strengthening public-private partnerships in agriculture, optimising technology, resource inputs, processing and market promotion, risk management, knowledge exchange, and training for key stakeholders. To tackle the varied agri-challenges in the region to optimise research for farmers and consumers alike, it was stated that it’s critical to encourage collaborative solutions with inputs from research and development organisations as well as private and public sectors.
The symposium featured technical sessions on grain quality assessment, sensory evaluation, and novel areas of rice market research, delivered by IRRI experts and grain quality scientists from India, Bangladesh, and Nepal, and also from private sector leaders in the agri-food value chain, rice seed industry, millers, exporters, and FMCG.