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Contact:
Keith Nichols,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Sept.
12,
2005
NC
State Will Lead Research At New ‘Biopolis’ Institute
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
North Carolina
State University and Dole Foods will form a cutting-edge
research institute to lead the
state’s efforts in enhancing the nutritional
content of fruits and vegetables to improve human health;
increasing agricultural production to create a sustainable
food supply; and providing scientific ideas and technologies
that will contribute to North Carolina’s economic
growth. The Dole-NC State Institute for Advanced Fruit
and Vegetable Science is part of a “biopolis” being
constructed at the site of the former Pillowtex facility
in Kannapolis.
The Institute for Advanced Fruit and Vegetable Science
is a research and education institute with a global
vision for improving the human condition. In addition
to more plentiful harvests of fruits and vegetables
already grown in North Carolina, NC State researchers
and extension personnel will work with farmers to bring
new crops to North Carolina in order to meet the demands
of a Dole processing plant nearby.
“NC State has built a tradition of listening
to the needs of the people and businesses of North
Carolina and responding with real-world solutions,” said
Chancellor James L. Oblinger. “Our strengths
in agriculture, research and technology make NC State
uniquely qualified to operate the Institute for Advanced
Fruit and Vegetable Science. The world-class basic
and applied research conducted at the institute will
yield innovative results and our extension service – with
offices in all 100 NC counties and the Cherokee reservation
-- will share the new developments across the state.
“This project could mean a significant boost
in economic development for North Carolina. Working
with the state’s producers and processors, we
have an opportunity to not only make a strong contribution
to the Kannapolis area, but to the entire state. ”
The work of NC State researchers at the institute
will be devoted to:
- improving quality traits of crops, including
nutritional value, flavor, size
and color
- discovering better and faster ways to
grow fruits and vegetables to size while enhancing
flavor
- extending the harvest to near year-round
capabilities
- improving resistance to disease managing irrigation
to provide maximum productivity and quality of fruits
at a low cost
- extending preservation and shelf life
“As a first-class research facility, the institute
will quickly establish an international reputation
for excellence and leadership in translating research
into practical benefits,” said Steve Leath, associate
dean and director of the North Carolina Agriculture
Research Service. Leath said a team approach to research
will fuel this rise to international prominence. NC
State will employ teams that combine researchers from
genetics, genomics, horticultural science and plant
breeding for research on a single crop.
Each team
will examine methods of increasing nutritional value
of the given crop, novel storage and preservation
methods, extending the harvest season, protecting the
crop against diseases, and other methods of crop improvement.
The team also will consider ways to meet the growing
demand for organic crops. This model will not only
create a novel team approach, but also allow researchers
from each team to interact – for example, allowing
the geneticist from each team to share research.
This work will include berry crops and other fruits,
as well as vegetables and flowers.
“NC State will work with Dole in an unprecedented,
ongoing and ambitious effort to recruit and assist
farmers in the growing of fruits and vegetables needed
to meet the high demands of the Dole plant,” Leath
said.
“Research
and extension personnel will coordinate grower transition
to new crops, or to greater acreage
of particular crops. The effort could support and complement
changes in the tobacco industry by providing diverse
and alternative crop choices to growers, and the expertise
to produce them.”
Coordination of the harvest cycle also is an important
part of the process. NC State will assist in the recruitment,
education and coordination of farmers across the state
so that crops could be harvested virtually year-round.
For example, with a given crop, early-season harvests
might take place first in eastern North Carolina, followed
by harvests in the piedmont, and later harvests in
the western mountains completing the cycle.
NC State envisions the creation of about 60 new jobs,
including 12 new faculty research positions, as well
as several grad students and postdocs at Kannapolis.
Ongoing
educational support would be provided through distance
learning, producer training, consumer outreach
(including outreach to high schools), grower awareness,
and internship opportunities for NC State, UNC-Charlotte
and North Carolina A&T State University students.
The facility will include 100,000 square feet of research
space and 65,000 square feet of greenhouse space. The Dole project at Kannapolis also will include UNC-Chapel
Hill and UNC-Charlotte.
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