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Prof.
Pedro Sanchez
Prof. Pedro Sanchez is the Director of Tropical
Agriculture at the Columbia University Earth
Institute and Professor Emeritus of Soil
Science and Forestry at North Carolina State
University. He is the winner of the 2002
World Food Prize and a pioneer in the field
of tropical soils and agroforestry. Previously
Prof. Sanchez served as director general
of the International Center for Research
in Agroforestry in Kenya where he spearheaded
innovative programs that helped small farmers
utilize inexpensive, natural resources instead
of very costly fertilizers to return nutrients
to depleted soil. These have dramatically
increased crop yields for hundreds of thousands
of small farmers. As part of an international
team of scientists Prof. Sanchez helped
turn the acidic, tropical soils of the Cerrado
region of Brazil into 30 million hectares
of productive, arable land. He has also
lived in the Philippines (working at the
International Rice Research Institute and
the University of the Philippines at Los
Baños), Peru (working with the Ministry
of Agriculture), and Colombia (working at
the Centro Internacional de Agricultura
Tropical). He is author of "Properties
and management of soils of the tropics" and of over 200 scientific publications.
Prof. Sanchez holds numerous honors that
include recipient of the International Soil
Science Award by the Soil Science Society
of America, the International Service in
Agronomy Award by the American Society of
Agronomy and an honorary doctorate from
the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium.
One of the honors he treasures most is being
named a Luo Elder in 2001 by the Luo community
of Western Kenya in recognition of his work
eliminating hunger from many villages in
the region. A native of Cuba, Prof. Sanchez
earned his Ph.D. in soil science from Cornell.
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