Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • About
  • Who we are
  • News
  • Events
  • Publications
  • Search

Secondary Menu

  • Independent Science for Development CouncilISDC
    • Who we are
    • News
    • Events
    • Publications
    • Featured Projects
      • Inclusive Innovation
        • Agricultural Systems Special Issue
      • Proposal Reviews
        • 2025-30 Portfolio
        • Reform Advice
      • Foresight & Trade-Offs
        • Megatrends
      • QoR4D
      • Comparative Advantage
  • Standing Panel on Impact AssessmentSPIA
    • About
      • Who We Are
      • Our Mandate
      • Impact Assessment Focal Points
      • SPIA Affiliates Network
    • Our Work
      • Country Studies
        • Community of Practice
        • Bangladesh Study
        • Ethiopia Study
        • Uganda Study
        • Vietnam Study
      • Causal Impact Assessment
        • Call for Expressions of Interest: Accountability and Learning Impact Studies
      • Use of Evidence
      • Cross-Cutting Areas
        • Capacity Strengthening
        • Methods and Measurement
        • Guidance to IDTs
    • Resources
      • Publications
      • Blog Series on Qualitative Methods for Impact Assessment
      • SPIA-emLab Agricultural Interventions Database
    • Activities
      • News
      • Events
      • Webinars
  • Evaluation
    • Who we are
    • News
    • Events
    • Publications
    • Evaluations
      • Science Group Evaluations
      • Platform Evaluations
        • CGIAR Genebank Platform Evaluation
        • CGIAR GENDER Platform Evaluation
        • CGIAR Excellence in Breeding Platform
        • CGIAR Platform for Big Data in Agriculture
    • Framework and Policy
      • Evaluation Method Notes Resource Hub
      • Management Engagement and Response Resource Hub
      • Evaluating Quality of Science for Sustainable Development
      • Evaluability Assessments – Enhancing Pathway to Impact
      • Evaluation Guidelines
  • Independent Science for Development CouncilISDC
  • Standing Panel on Impact AssessmentSPIA
  • Evaluation
Back to IAES Main Menu

Secondary Menu

  • Who we are
  • News
  • Events
  • Publications
  • Featured Projects
    • Inclusive Innovation
      • Agricultural Systems Special Issue
    • Proposal Reviews
      • 2025-30 Portfolio
      • Reform Advice
    • Foresight & Trade-Offs
      • Megatrends
    • QoR4D
    • Comparative Advantage
Ines Gonzalez de Suso / IAES
Blog

Science in Bloom: ISDC Visits the James Hutton Institute in Scotland

You are here

  • Home
  • Independent Science for Development CouncilISDC
  • News
  • Science in Bloom: ISDC Visits the James Hutton Institute in Scotland

The Independent Science for Development Council (ISDC) met in Edinburgh from 18–21 July for its first semiannual meeting of 2025. Over several packed days, we wrapped up the review of the CGIAR 2025–2030 Portfolio Inception Reports and officially welcomed our newest members Bruce Lankford and Ingrid Fromm.

Once the meetings were over, it was time to get out into the field. We headed north to Dundee to visit the James Hutton Institute (JHI), an institution many of us knew by name, because ISDC member Lesley Torrance is an Honorary Fellow. But there was also a chance to learn more about the man behind the name. James Hutton, an 18th-century Scottish polymath known for his work as a geologist, agriculturalist, naturalist, and physician, he is often credited as the “father of modern geology.” His work changed our understanding about the age of the earth, and geological or deep time, influenced Charles Darwin’s thinking on evolution. 

James Hutton Institute building

Our hosts, John Jones (Senior Scientist) and Colin Campbell (Chief Executive of JHI), started the day by sharing JHI’s collaborations with CGIAR centers. John walked us through a joint project with the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) to develop potato cyst nematode (PCN)–resistant potato lines for smallholder farmers in East Africa. PCN is a recent but fast-spreading problem in Kenya, now present in every potato-growing region and causing serious yield losses, as well as ecological pressures like deforestation. The goal of the project was to find new potato varieties that can stand up to the pest and protect farmers’ livelihoods and two new varieties are approved for release to small holder farmers.

Ali Karley, the head of the Ecological Sciences Dept, talked about their work on agroecology and approaches to sustainable future food and farming systems. She emphasized that they consider agroecology as more than regenerative farming, sustainable intensification or organic farming, it is a framework for a whole ‘Systems’ approach to provide food and nutrition security, addressing complex problems posed by biodiversity and climate crises. She provided examples of ongoing work on new crops, cropping practices and novel products as well as integrated studies on farm and how they work across sectors and disciplines to find solutions.

Next, we visited a company co-located on JHI site, Intelligent Growth Solutions (IGS), where Doug Elder introduced us to the Vertical Growth Tower, an indoor, fully controlled growing system that packs plants in at high densities. These towers deliver identical, high-quality crops year-round and are a powerful research tool because their consistency accelerates crop breeding and gene discovery.

ISDC Visiting the IGS

Another highlight was the Commonwealth Potato Collection, about 1,500 accessions representing 80 wild and cultivated potato species, each with origins traced to South and Central America. With Brian Harrower as our guide, we stepped into the greenhouses - suited up in lab coats and shoe covers- and were lucky enough to catch the potato plants in full bloom.

Amanpreet Kaur, a research scientist, outlined a joint appointment between JHI and the International Potato Center (CIP), explaining CIP’s focus on potato biofortification, diploid hybrid breeding and the collaboration’s reciprocal transfer of material—examples include QuickGro and PCN-resistant Hutton lines.

ISDC members in the greenhouse

The visit concluded with Paul Shaw describing how software development supports plant genetics, breeding, and genetic resource management, followed by a guided tour of the Phenotyping Centre with Rob Hancock, Deputy Director of the Advanced Plant Growth Centre. There, we saw the Plantscreen Modular System in action — an advanced, modular phenotyping platform that captures everything from high-resolution plant imaging to precise physiological measurements.

ISDC visiting the plantscreen modular system

ISDC would like to extend its gratitude to the James Hutton Institute and all the staff who warmly welcomed us during our visit. The visit was insightful, engaging, and full of learning, and it was especially rewarding to see where our own Council member, Lesley Torrance, is based and contributing to such important work.

Share on

Science ISDC
Aug 20, 2025

Written by

  • Ines Gonzalez de Suso

    Secretariat Officer, ISDC
  • Lesley Torrance

    ISDC Member

Related News

Posted on
02 Jun 2025
by
  • Amy R. Beaudreault
  • Holger Meinke

ISDC’s Northern Summer Assignment: Inception Report Reviews

Posted on
09 Apr 2025

Join ISDC: Vacancies for Chair and New Members

Posted on
26 Mar 2025
by
  • Ines Gonzalez de Suso
  • Amy R. Beaudreault

ISDC 101: The Nuts & Bolts of the CGIAR Independent Science for Development Council

More News

Related Publications

Assessments & Commentaries
Science ISDC
Issued on 2024

ISDC Review of 2025-2030 Research & Innovation Portfolio Proposals

Assessments & Commentaries
Science ISDC
Issued on 2024

ISDC Feedback on CGIAR Portfolio Narrative 2025-2030

ISDC Feedback on CGIAR Portfolio Narrative 2025-2030
Assessments & Commentaries
Science ISDC
Issued on 2024

ISDC Feedback on CGIAR Portfolio Narrative 2025-2030

More publications

CGIAR Independent Advisory and Evaluation Service (IAES)

Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT
Via di San Domenico,1
00153 Rome, Italy
  • IAES@cgiar.org
  • (39-06) 61181

Follow Us

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
  • Terms and conditions
  • © CGIAR 2025

IAES provides operational support as the secretariat for the Independent Science for Development Council and the Standing Panel on Impact Assessment, and implements CGIAR’s multi-year, independent evaluation plan as approved by the CGIAR’s System Council.