Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Gebisa Ejeta is finding lasting solutions to hunger

The Ethiopian American plant geneticist designed better sorghum — saving thousands, if not millions, of lives.

Illustrated portrait of Gebisa Ejeta
Illustrated portrait of Gebisa Ejeta
Lauren Tamaki for Vox

Gebisa Ejeta is finding lasting solutions to hunger

The Ethiopian American plant geneticist designed better sorghum — saving thousands, if not millions, of lives.

Izzie Ramirez
Izzie Ramirez was a deputy editor of Future Perfect, Vox’s section on the myriad challenges and efforts in making the world a better place. She oversaw the Future Perfect fellowship program.

Food scientist Gebisa Ejeta couldn’t stand idly by while people suffer from hunger. Born in a remote village in Ethiopia more than 70 years ago, Ejeta would walk more than 12 miles to school in a nearby town to learn. His mother later encouraged him, with help from an Oklahoma State University program in Ethiopia, to attend an agricultural and technical secondary school.

“I come from just abject poverty,” Ejeta told Reuters in a 2009 interview. “It was not difficult to recognize if those kinds of opportunities could be made available to more kids like me, then the community would be better.”

That investment into his education would be the beginning of one of the most ambitious and impactful projects in food technology: fortifying sorghum to be resistant to striga, disease, and environmental stressors like drought and cold by breeding new varieties of the crop.

Striga — or witchweed — may be beautiful to look at, with its delicate, colorful flowers. But its parasitic roots siphon water and nutrients from host plants, devastating them. When striga comes into contact with sorghum, the fifth most produced cereal crop in the world, it leaves very little edible food in its wake.

More than 300 million people in Africa rely on sorghum as a steady and delicious source of nutrition. (Bump that to 500 million if you include Asia.) Yet striga can cause anywhere from 20 to 100 percent crop losses in an infested field, effectively starving broad swaths of people.

In 2009, Ejeta won the World Food Prize for developing the first high-yield hybrid sorghum plants, resistant to both drought and attack from striga. Since then, he’s created several other resilient varieties — one current variety in development is a white sorghum that can grow in lowlands. And in October, 14 years later, he was awarded the prestigious National Medal of Science, the highest scientific honor in the US.

Our methodology

To select this year’s Future Perfect 50, our team went through a months-long process. Starting with last year’s list, we brainstormed, researched deeply, and connected with our audience and sources. We didn’t want to overrepresent in any one category, so we aimed for diversity in theories of change, academic specialities, age, geographic location, identity, and many other criteria.

To learn more about the FP50 methodology and criteria, go here.

“By developing sorghum strains that withstand droughts and parasites, he has improved food security for millions,” President Joe Biden said at a ceremony honoring Ejeta and other recipients at the White House. “His advocacy for science, policy, and institutions as key to economic development has lifted the fortunes of farmers and strengthened the souls of nations.”

Ejeta, who is also the executive director at Purdue University’s Center for Global Food Security, has a long and storied career as a policy adviser on possible solutions to world hunger. From working with the US Agency for International Development and the US State Department to serving on former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s scientific advisory board, Ejeta has advocated for using science to boost Africa’s food production — just as the Green Revolution had done. Many humanitarian groups and governments will give emergency food aid to African countries, which doesn’t get to the root of the problem. Ejeta’s work, and others like it, will.

“Sometimes I may appear to my colleagues that I have a missionary zeal,” Ejeta told Reuters. “I have been really single-minded about trying to do the best that I can to advance science-based development.”

Future Perfect
The 2025 Future Perfect 25The 2025 Future Perfect 25
Future Perfect

Meet the heroes keeping global progress alive.

By Bryan Walsh
The End of HIV
India’s drug industry saved the world once. Can it do it again?India’s drug industry saved the world once. Can it do it again?
The End of HIV

The “pharmacy of the world” needs to reinvent itself.

By Pratik Pawar
Future Perfect
How 6 organizers are building effective global health solutions from the bottom upHow 6 organizers are building effective global health solutions from the bottom up
Future Perfect

Meet the Future Perfect 25: On the ground.

By Bryan Walsh, Marina Bolotnikova and 3 more
Future Perfect
Free cancer treatment for all — and 5 other ideas to transform global healthFree cancer treatment for all — and 5 other ideas to transform global health
Future Perfect

Meet the Future Perfect 25: Movers and Shakers.

By Izzie Ramirez, Sara Herschander and 2 more
Future Perfect
The future of global health is at stake. These 7 pioneers could revolutionize it.The future of global health is at stake. These 7 pioneers could revolutionize it.
Future Perfect

Meet the Future Perfect 25: The Innovators.

By Izzie Ramirez, Sigal Samuel and 3 more
Future Perfect
The 6 big thinkers reshaping foreign aid, masculinity, and developmentThe 6 big thinkers reshaping foreign aid, masculinity, and development
Future Perfect

Meet the Future Perfect 25: The Thinkers

By Izzie Ramirez, Sara Herschander and 4 more