Close X
Saturday, March 1, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Professor R. Paul Singh Named World Agriculture Prize Laureate

IANS, 02 Jul, 2015 11:57 AM
    R. Paul Singh, a distinguished professor emeritus at the University of California, Davis, has been named as the 2015 Global Confederation for Higher Education Associations for Agriculture and Life Sciences World Agriculture Prize laureate.
     
    Singh, an agricultural engineering graduate from India's Punjab Agricultural University, has been recognized for a body of research in areas such as energy conservation, freezing preservation, postharvest technology and mass transfer in food processing.
     
    He has helped establish and evaluate food-engineering programmes at institutions throughout the world, including in Brazil, India, Peru, Portugal and Thailand.
     
    As of June 2015, his 115 video tutorials have been viewed more than 150,000 times by individuals from 193 countries.
     
    "I'm deeply humbled and honoured, upon receiving news of this award," said Singh.
     
    "I'm also indebted to my UC Davis colleagues for their consistent support, which has allowed me to pursue my research and teaching activities in food engineering," he said.
     
    The award was announced at the annual GCHERA conference, held June 24-26 at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik, Jounieh, Lebanon, according to a post on UC Davis website.
     
    Formal presentation of the award will take place Sep 20, during a ceremony at Nanjing Agricultural University, Jiangsu Province, China.
     
    Singh earned a master's degree and PhD at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Michigan State University, respectively. He joined the UC Davis faculty one year later, in 1975.
     
    "For over four decades, Professor Singh's work as a pioneer in food engineering has been improving lives the world over," said UC Davis Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi.
     
    "This prestigious, and well-deserved, honour is a testament to the importance of his research."
     
    Singh's research on airflow in complex systems helped design innovative systems for the rapid cooling of strawberries, and his studies on food freezing led to the development of computer software that is used to improve the energy efficiency of industrial freezers.
     
    Under a NASA contract, his research group created food-processing equipment for a manned mission to Mars.
     
    In recent years, his research focused on the physical mechanisms responsible for the digestion of foods in the human stomach, with an eye toward developing the next generation of foods for health.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian Born Teen Girl In New Zealand Wins Competition Against Racism

    Indian Born Teen Girl In New Zealand Wins Competition Against Racism
    Kimberly D'Mello, a class 12 student at Tauranga's Aquinas College, in the North Island, won the competition at Te Mahurehure Marae in Pt Chevalier, Auckland on Saturday night

    Indian Born Teen Girl In New Zealand Wins Competition Against Racism

    Modi Visit: India, Mongolia Stress 'Bonds Of Hearts And Minds'

    Modi Visit: India, Mongolia Stress 'Bonds Of Hearts And Minds'
    The two countries also inked 13 agreements, including in the sphere of air services, cyber security and transfer of sentenced prisoners.

    Modi Visit: India, Mongolia Stress 'Bonds Of Hearts And Minds'

    India Won’t Forget Kargil War: Musharraf

    Recalling the Kargil conflict of 1999 between India and Pakistan, former military strongman Pervez Musharraf on Sunday said New Delhi would never be able to forget the three-month-long battle when his armed forces "grabbed India by the throat".

    India Won’t Forget Kargil War: Musharraf

    Modi Plays Mongolian Fiddle, Strikes New Chord In Ties

    Modi Plays Mongolian Fiddle, Strikes New Chord In Ties
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday tried his hand at the morin khuur, a traditional two-stringed fiddle, that was gifted to him by Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj.

    Modi Plays Mongolian Fiddle, Strikes New Chord In Ties

    Sikh Man In New Zealand Breaks Religious Protocol, Removes His Turban To Help Injured Child

    Sikh Man In New Zealand Breaks Religious Protocol, Removes His Turban To Help Injured Child
    Harman Singh, 22, did not think twice before removing his turban to help the five-year-old who was hit by a car on way to school in Wellington

    Sikh Man In New Zealand Breaks Religious Protocol, Removes His Turban To Help Injured Child

    Australian Newspaper Shows A Sikh Smoking Cigar, Creates Outrage, Protest Among Australian Sikhs

    Australian Newspaper Shows A Sikh Smoking Cigar, Creates Outrage, Protest Among Australian Sikhs
    Sikhs in Australia have expressed outrage after a daily published a cartoon of a Sikh man smoking a cigar, a media report said on Friday.

    Australian Newspaper Shows A Sikh Smoking Cigar, Creates Outrage, Protest Among Australian Sikhs