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Library CPWF Annual Report 2006

CPWF Annual Report 2006

CPWF Annual Report 2006

Resource information

Date of publication
december 2007
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
handle:10568/5408
License of the resource

The CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food (CPWF) is a multi-institutional research for development program

that seeks to create and disseminate international public goods to improve the productivity of water in river basins in

ways that are pro-poor, gender equitable and environmentally sustainable. In doing so, CPWF contributes to efforts by

the global community to ensure that global diversions of water to agriculture are maintained at the level of the year

2000.

The specific objectives of the Program are to increase food production using less water, to improve livelihoods and

nutrition of the rural and peri-urban poor, to decrease water pollution from agriculture, to maintain water-related

ecosystems services and to reduce water-related diseases. To address these objectives, the program is structured into

five thematic areas: crop water productivity improvement; water and people in catchments; aquatic ecosystems and

fisheries; integrated basin water management; and the global and national water and food system. Research is

conducted in nine benchmark river basins, including the Andean system, Indus-Ganges, Karkheh, Limpopo, Mekong,

Nile, Sao Francisco, Volta and the Yellow.

Research in the Challenge Program is implemented through one of four focused research initiatives. First call projects,

selected through a competitive process, make up the greater part of the present CPWF research portfolio. Basin focal

projects add value to individual research project outputs by identifying in specific benchmark basins opportunities for

water-related interventions to achieve CPWF and partner development goals. Small grants for impact serve to remind

Program researchers of how their research should have practical outcomes for communities on the ground. Synthesis

research is essential to drawing together a large body of disparate and diverse information into a comprehensive whole.

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