Monday, October 18, 2010

Brazilian scientists turning nation into an agro-power



(Juan Forero/the Washington Post "When We Started To Plant In The Cerrado, I Could Never Have Imagined We'd Be Planting Wheat,"said Paulo Kramer, Who Came To The Arid Savanna In The 1980S. "Wheat Was For Cold Climates.")




Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, October 16, 2010; 9:51 PM
CRISTALINA, BRAZIL - Barely two generations ago, the gently rolling hills here in Brazil's heartland were a knot of short, brittle trees and acidic soil considered unfit for agriculture. But on a recent morning, a New Holland harvester cut through golden husks of wheat on Paulo Kramer's farm.
Wheat, of course, is a temperate crop that flourishes in places like Kansas and South Dakota. But here in Brazil's Cerrado, a wide savannah that covers nearly a quarter of the country, wheat varieties created especially for tropical climates and nutrient-poor soil bloom alongside corn, soybeans and cotton.
Once seen as a wasteland, the Cerrado is now the motor of an agro-industry so potent that Brazil threatens to surpass the United States as breadbasket to the world. The answer to how that transformation happened can be found at a government-run agricultural research center, called Embrapa, where scientists make Brazil's poor soils fertile while developing crop varieties that will thrive here, such as wheat./.../

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