WV Farm Bureau Magazine December 2014 | Page 7

A New Generation Called to Feed the World Matt Nicol Sponsor Relations Account Executive Nationwide 614-359-7342 [email protected] With 9 billion people to feed by 2050, filling professional agriculture jobs will be critical to achieving food and nutrition security in the 21 st century. A report released Oct. 16 at the World Food Prize Borlaug Dialogue by the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) Food & Ag Council, found that demand for new talent in the food and agriculture industries is outpacing the available candidates entering the workforce from academic programs. Terrance Williams, Nationwide Agribusiness president & COO, is a member of the council. “The food and agriculture industries are projected to have a substantial need for new business and science professionals in the coming years,” said Kim Reynolds, Lt. Governor of Iowa and chair of the STEM Food & Ag Council. “It is critical our students be prepared for the jobs of the twenty-first century.” According to the figures in the report, the agriculture industry is expected to grow by almost 5 percent over the next five years. The need to transfer knowledge from the retiring generation to their successors will also create additional demand for the next generation of industry professionals. “Meeting the increasing global demand for food will require the next generation of scientists, innovators and entrepreneurs,” said Paul Schickler, DuPont Pioneer president and vice-chair of the STEM Food & Ag Council. “Our industry faces the stigma that we exist only in fields and processing factories, but we are also accountants, economists, scientists, investors, communicators, and everything else needed to run an international industry.” The research in the report identifies growing opportunities for college graduates in six advanced agriculture fields. Despite an increase of 30 percent over the past eight years in enrollment in academic programs that feed into these professions, there still aren’t enough graduates to keep up with the demand for qualified candidates. To illustrate the success of recent graduates in the agriculture industry, the report also highlights five young professionals who are advancing in their careers at major agribusinesses — including DuPont Pioneer, Land O’Lakes, and Monsanto – after completing university STEM programs. “Agriculture is increasingly global and information-based, which is as exciting at the farm gate as it is in international agribusiness,” said Andrew Lauver, the 24-year-old Frank Ross International Emerging Leader at DuPont Pioneer. “There are so many opportunities for people my age to make a real impact and travel the world as a part of the solution to global hunger and poverty.” In the report, the STEM Food & Ag Council recommends that the public and private sectors partner to guide, educate and recruit the next generation of college graduates toward the business and science career opportunities that are growing within the food and agriculture industries. View full ag employment data in the 2014 STEM Food & Ag Council Report: http://www. stemconnector.org/stem-food-ag-council-0 West Virginia Farm Bureau News 7