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Soils

  1. SOILS Deborah Bossio E-mail name here@cigar.org CIAT APR JUNE 2015
  2. International Year of Soils • The UN declared 2015 as International Year of Soils to raise awareness of the urgent need to protect the resource that feeds and waters us • CIATs global soils research team is working with partners to protect and restore this vital resource • CIAT has the largest group of scientists dedicated to soil science in the CGIAR • One key strength of CIAT’s group is that we work with all CIAT research areas to deliver solutions to big challenges
  3. CIAT Soils Research Area Restoring Degraded Land Soils and Climate Change Sustaining Soil Fertility
  4. Fresh Face in Print and On-line • Updated soils brief & Webpages • Increased soils blog activity Blogs posted Individual visitors 2014: Total: 13 Jan – April: 555 2015: Jan – April: 10 Jan – April: 2,350
  5. New Ways to Communicate our Messages • New products – films & infographics • Increased social media outreach
  6. Launch of Nairobi Water Fund
  7. Reaching Farmers
  8. #TalkSoil Storify
  9. CIAT at Global Soil Week Co-hosted 5 key sessions and discussions: •Mitigation & adaptation to climate change through SLM •Soil and land information: How to support decision making? •Soil fertility management: Towards a joint paradigm •Giving living soil a voice: Approaches and tools •Down to earth data: Soil and contextual data in landscape planning and ecosystem services
  10. Focus today: Land and Soil Restoration •Why?: Grand Challenge of the CGIAR with a target of restoring 190M ha of land by 2030 •Goal: to articulate a unified agenda for CIAT that includes strength of all Research Areas invitation to join the SOIL FAIR
  11. Soil Rehabilitation : €40M Special Initiative of the German Government
  12. Agronomicefficiency Current practice Germplasm & fertilizer + Organic resource mgt + Local adaptation Germplasm & fertilizer’ + Organic resource mgt Germplasm & fertilizer ‘Full ISFM’ Move towards ISFM Increase in knowledge Integrated Soil Fertility Management (ISFM) 10 years of CIAT research ✔ Soil Rehabilitation in Africa
  13. Proposition: “We have ISFM, no need for more CIAT research to restore degraded soils” Do you agree or disagree? Why? Is CIAT indispensible or not?
  14. 14 20by20 intro
  15. White slide for big graphics 20by20 Colombia Pledged to Restore 1M ha WRI Political buy-in ✔ Investor matching ✔ Mapping ✔ Business Cases ✔
  16. Proposition: “CIAT research is not necessary for success of the 20by20 Initiative” Do you agree or disagree? Why? Is CIAT indispensible or not?

Editor's Notes

  1. Snapshots of activities? Link to research?
  2. Refreshed for IYS New soils brief Now reflects the growing and diverse soils team as well as research on ground. Input from all team members. Three soils research area themes now better reflect the work we are doing – Restoring degraded land; Soils and climate change; & sustaining soil fertility and health. Updated web pages, including AfNET Increased soils blog activity – 320% increase in individual visitors this year compared to the same time last year.
  3. Creating new products to communicate our work – films, infographics And increasing our social media output – encouraging team members to share news through their networks and increasing CIAT social media output on soils research
  4. First water fund in Africa launched on 20 March 2015. Partnership with The Nature Conservancy and 9 others. CIAT is the research partner Facts & Figures: Tana delivers water to over 9.3 million people, including 1 million farmers upstream and 4 million residents of Nairobi. The fund will generate US$21.5 million in long term benefits to Kenyan citizens including farmers and businesses. Launch activities: News blog Joint news release with TNC & Burness Communications Fred Kizito did 4 media interviews, including a live broadcast on CNBC Africa (link http://www.cnbcafrica.com/video/?bctid=4124111152001 – can’t embed as don’t have access to the video) 2 x media trips to Tana River including journalists from SciDev.net, Bloomberg and Christian Science Monitor Live tweeting from launch event
  5. Shamba Shape Up is an edutainment TV series broadcast in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania that helps farmers shape up their farms with advice from experts. In April this year, Shamba Shape Up was awarded the Sustainable Business Awards 2015 for Innovation by the Guardian for its ‘desire to promote sustainable farming practices, but also offers hope to east African farmers vulnerable to climate change.’ With funding from WLE and CCAFS CIAT has sponsored 5 episodes to reach farmers with important knowledge and information about soils. Three episodes filmed in Kenya, two filmed in Tanzania. First episode broadcast in Kenya on 28 March 2015. The rest will be screened between May and July. Shamba Shape Up is watched by 10 million people; this is not a passive, urban audience. Their average land holding is 1-2 acres, and they are in the rural cash economy. Almost 50% are women. Viewers can request more information by requesting a free leaflet or asking questions about agricultural information during each program. Research following the first, second and third series of Shamba-Shape Up showed that 89% of 800 viewers surveyed said they had learnt something new and 46% had adopted a new practice or changed their farming, including 22% who improved their soil fertility by using manure or other composting, 2% who took up crop rotation and 11% who started intercropping maize and beans. Sponsorship outcomes and delivery outputs: Five episodes featuring soils as a key topic to be broadcast March-July 2015 online and on air in Kenya and Tanzania as well as on DSTV Short videos of each of CIATs experts in each show Blog posts and social media outreach to promote broadcast and online films
  6. Our sponsorship of Shamba Shape Up led to a successful Tweet Chat organised by CIAT and Shamba Shape Up . We invited 5 organisations to join a panel of experts to #TalkSoil and help farmers build healthier soils The tweet chat attracted interest world-wide and led to a lively and interactive discussion between experts and farmers. It generated nearly 1,000 tweets from 186 participants and reached more than 300,000 people. Contributors included our 6-strong panel of experts as well as a wealth of Kenyan farmers seeking advice for their soil related issues ranging from protecting their soil from erosion to soil testing. The panel included participants from Mediae (producers of Shamba Shape Up); Ypard; One Acre Fund; SoilCares Ltd; Syngenta and CIAT. The tweet chat was followed by the production of 3 Storify’s documenting the full chat. Tweet Chat guiding questions: 1, What are the challenges smallholder farmers are facing with their soils? 2, How can farmers address these challenges -   – to prevent the health of their soil from deteriorating further?   – to increase their yields and livelihoods? 3, What can they – and we – learn from others?
  7. Many sessions and contributions to full house- over 500 participants from over 80 countries Social media- blogs: http://ciatblogs.cgiar.org/soils/down-to-earth-data/ http://ciatblogs.cgiar.org/soils/farmers-talk-soil/ http://wle.cgiar.org/blogs/2015/04/21/can-africa-afford-to-save-its-soils/ http://ciatblogs.cgiar.org/soils/ciat-at-global-soils-week-2015/ http://wle.cgiar.org/blog/2015/04/17/global-soil-week-2015/ CG feature: http://www.cgiar.org/consortium-news/in-focus-developing-landscapes-for-a-brighter-tomorrow/ Active engagement, presence and reach on twitter and Facebook Engagement and visibility with many (potential) partners and donors
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