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Better Crops To Feed Millions
Feeding growing populations is a problem that countries around the world struggle with, 19 September 2012. More →
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Mobile Learning, Mobile Health
Rethy Chhem, Director, IAEA Human Health Division, talks about the Agency's on-line "Human Health Campus" and the project that will make the Campus mobile and accessible to a wider audience via mobile phones, 22 September 2011:
Nuclear Science and Childhood Malnutrition
Alan Jackson, Convenor, International Malnutrition Task Force:
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Food For the Future
Benefiting from nuclear science and the support of the IAEA to produce and protect food and make it safer, 18 September 2012:
The High Andes of Peru, the busy streets of Jakarta and the dusty Cameroon bush have one thing in common: the people here are all benefiting from nuclear science and the support of the IAEA to produce and protect food and make it safer.
Birth of Centenario - Farming in the High Andes
Few plants thrive at altitudes of over 4 000 metres, where soil is poor, water scare and the winters harsh, 18 September 2012:
Few plants thrive at altitudes of over 4 000 metres, where soil is poor, water scare and the winters harsh. But farmers in the High Andes of Peru can grow varieties of sturdy grains, such as barley, that can survive under extreme weather conditions. These have been developed with a plant breeding technique that uses radiation on seeds to induce changes in plants.
- Proper Pesticide Use - Monitoring Impact of Pesticides With Nuclear Techniques, 18 September 2012
- More Food With Better Soil - Using Isotope Techniques To Improve Soil Quality, 18 September 2012
- Safer Food For a Growing Population - Using Food Irradiation in Indonesia, 18 September 2012
- Better Fruit For Neretva Valley, 18 September 2012
- Childhood Malnutrition, 29 January 2010





