How Does The Gates Foundation Spend Its Money To Feed The World?
At some point in June this year, the total amount given as grants to food and agriculture projects by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation surpassed the US$3 billion mark. It marked quite a milestone. From nowhere on the agricultural scene less than a decade ago, the Gates Foundation has emerged as one of the world's major donors to agricultural research and development.
The Gates Foundation is arguably the biggest philanthropic venture ever. It currently holds a $40 billion endowment, made up mostly of contributions from Gates and his billionaire friend Warren Buffet. The foundation has over 1,200 staff, and has given over $30 billion in grants since its inception in 2000, $3.6 billion in 2013 alone.2 Most of the grants go to global health programmes and educational work in the US, traditionally the foundation's priority areas. But in 2006-2007, the foundation massively expanded its funding for agriculture, with the launch of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) and a series of large grants to the international agricultural research system (CGIAR). In 2007, it spent over half a billion dollars on agricultural projects and has maintained funding at around this level. The vast majority of the foundation's agricultural grants focus on Africa...
- Tags:
- Africa
- African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF)
- African Non-governmental Organizations (NGOs)
- Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)
- Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (B&MGF)
- biotechnology
- Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
- Cornell University (CU)
- genetically modified organisms (GMOs)
- global health
- grain
- green revolution
- Harvard University
- United Nations (UN)
- World Bank (WB)
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