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Février, Raymond (1920-....)

Person | 15 novembre 1920 - Identifier: FRAN_NP_009721
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Date of birth:

15 novembre 1920

OCCUPATION

Occupation:

chercheur

Occupation:

inspecteur général

BIOGRAPHY

Biography:

Né le 15 novembre 1920 à La Faurie (Hautes-Alpes), Raymond Février est le fils d’André Février, responsable syndical des PTT lors des grèves postales de 1909, député socialiste de Lyon à partir de 1924, président du groupe parlementaire socialiste après l’accession de Léon Blum à la présidence du Conseil en 1936, puis ministre à cinq reprises (en particulier, du Travail, des Travaux publics et des Transmissions et PTT) dans les derniers gouvernements de la IIIème République.

Après des études secondaires aux lycées Ampère et du Parc à Lyon, il prépare, avec succès, en 1939-1940, au lycée Pierre-de-Fermat de Toulouse, le concours d’entrée à l’Institut national agronomique de Paris (INA ou Agro). À sa sortie, en 1942, il renonce aux débouchés du Génie rural et des Eaux et Forêts pour accepter une bourse de recherche financée par l’industrie naissante des aliments pour le bétail. Jusqu’à la fin 1944, il s’initie ainsi à la recherche zootechnique au sein du laboratoire annexé à la chaire du professeur André-Max Leroy à l’INA, pour conduire des travaux sur la production laitière et l’alimentation porcine dans plusieurs élevages de la région parisienne.

En 1945, il est recruté par le Service de la recherche et de l’expérimentation, transformé l’année suivante, sous l’impulsion du ministre de l’Agriculture François Tanguy-Prigent, en Institut national de la recherche agronomique (INRA). S’ouvre dès lors une longue carrière de chercheur et d’administrateur qui le mène, trente ans plus tard, à la direction générale de cet opérateur scientifique, devenu entre-temps le deuxième du pays en termes d’effectifs derrière le CNRS.

Dans le contexte difficile de l’après-guerre, il est d’abord chargé de l’installation, dans le domaine forestier de Bois-Corbon (commune de Saint-Prix, Val-d’Oise), de la première station expérimentale de l’INRA consacrée à l’élevage. Il y développe des travaux sur l’alimentation du porc et met au point une méthode de sélection fondée sur les performances d’engraissement et sur l’appréciation normalisée des carcasses.

À partir de 1947, année où il est nommé chargé de recherches, il étudie l’organisation et l’orientation des recherches zootechniques à l’étranger, notamment au cours de fréquentes missions au Danemark, aux Pays-Bas, en Allemagne et en Suède, puis aux États-Unis (en 1950). Fort de ces expériences, il assure, avec Charles Thibault, futur directeur général du CNRS, la conception et la mise en œuvre de l’ensemble des recherches zootechniques lors de la création, effective en 1951, du Centre national de recherches zootechniques (CNRZ) à Jouy-en-Josas (Yvelines). Il y dirige ensuite la Station de recherches sur l’élevage, avec les grades successifs de maître de recherches (1952) et de directeur de recherches (1959).

En 1961, il devient inspecteur général et parvient ainsi à la direction scientifique d’un établissement en plein essor. Aux côtés de Jean Bustarret, il prend en charge progressivement les secteurs de la zootechnie, des industries du lait et de la viande, de l’économie et de la sociologie, et des relations internationales. S’y ajoute l’hydrobiologie lorsque le ministre de l’Agriculture Edgard Pisani décide, en 1964, de transférer à l’INRA toutes les recherches relevant de la direction des Eaux et Forêts. Dans ces fonctions, il anime l’expansion des recherches animales, que vient consacrer l’ouverture de nouveaux centres de recherche en Guadeloupe et en province (à Clermont-Ferrand et à Tours, puis à Rennes et à Toulouse), sur fond de rééquilibrage géographique impulsé par le Plan.

Il accède à la direction générale de l’INRA en février 1975, en remplacement de Jean-Michel Soupault, ancien gouverneur des colonies. Il s’efforce alors d’asseoir l’influence des chercheurs sur la définition des politiques agricoles, mais se heurte aux restrictions budgétaires et à la multiplication des recrutements temporaires et des thèmes de recherche proposés par diverses autorités gouvernementales. Accaparé par ces problèmes et déçu une nouvelle fois du budget proposé pour son établissement, il présente sa démission en janvier 1978, mais ne quitte son poste qu’en juillet, après les élections législatives, à la demande du ministre de l’Agriculture Pierre Méhaignerie, qui désigne Jacques Poly pour lui succéder. L’année suivante, il remet encore un rapport sur les recherches de l’INRA dévolues aux productions méditerranéennes.

Tout au long de son parcours à l’INRA, il noue des relations étroites avec les organisations professionnelles agricoles. Après avoir soutenu le mouvement des Centres d’études techniques agricoles (CETA), il s’implique fortement, à partir des années 1960, dans le développement des instituts techniques. Ainsi, il contribue grandement à la création de l’Institut technique du porc (ITP) en 1961, avant d’être nommé, lors de sa mise en place en 1962, président du Conseil scientifique de l’Institut technique de l’élevage bovin (ITEB).

Dans le même temps, il est associé à la conception et à la coordination des politiques nationales de recherche. Il prend part aux travaux du Commissariat général du Plan et de la Délégation générale de la recherche scientifique et technique (DGRST) et siège, de 1972 à 1975, au Comité consultatif de la recherche scientifique et technique (CCRST), dit des « douze sages ». En cette qualité, il est désigné pour participer, fin 1972, à l’ouverture de l’Exposition scientifique française de Pékin, avec quelques autres personnalités, dont Pierre Aigrain et Hubert Curien, futurs ministres de la Recherche.

Du milieu des années 1970 au début des années 1990, il remplit en outre des missions d’administration et d’expertise auprès de divers établissements et organismes publics, et ce aux niveaux national, européen et international.

Au plan national, il exerce en premier lieu des responsabilités dirigeantes dans plusieurs établissements d’enseignement supérieur et de recherche. Il préside, de 1976 à 1980, le Conseil chargé de superviser la création d’une université en Corse, puis, de 1982 à 1992, le Conseil d’administration de l’École nationale supérieure agronomique de Toulouse (ENSAT) ; en 1989, il est aussi nommé au Conseil général de l’Institut national agronomique Paris-Grignon (INA-PG). Après l’arrivée de la gauche au pouvoir, Jean-Pierre Chevènement, ministre de la Recherche et de la Technologie, le charge, à l’automne 1981, d’une mission d’étude sur le Centre de documentation scientifique et technique (CDST) du CNRS. Au cours des années suivantes, il se voit confier la présidence des conseils d’administration du Centre du machinisme agricole, du génie rural, des eaux et des forêts (CEMAGREF) (1982-1985) et de l’Office national des forêts (ONF) (1984-1985). Dans le sillage de cette dernière fonction, il est appelé à participer à l’organisation de la Conférence Silva sur l’arbre et la forêt, tenue à Paris en février 1986. Par ailleurs, il est nommé à la section des Travaux publics du Conseil d’État (1983-1985), avant de rejoindre celle de l’Agriculture et de l’Alimentation du Conseil économique et social, où il est chargé d’un rapport intitulé L’agriculture française et l’agriculture des autres pays méditerranéens : complémentarités et concurrences, ensuite adopté par l’Assemblée plénière à la quasi-unanimité (1991-1993).

À l’échelon européen, il contribue à la création, officialisée en 1974, du Comité permanent de la recherche agricole (CPRA) auprès de la Commission des Communautés européennes, qui lui confie plus particulièrement l’animation scientifique du groupe « Agriculture méditerranéenne » (Agrimed) (1979-1983). Dans les mêmes moments, il est appelé, toujours à Bruxelles, en qualité de conseiller spécial d’Edgard Pisani, commissaire européen chargé du Développement (1981-1983). Il s’applique alors, dans le contexte de l’adoption d’un premier programme-cadre pour la recherche et le développement technologique (PCRD), à redéfinir la doctrine européenne de coopération scientifique avec les pays en développement, au premier rang desquels les pays d’Afrique, des Caraïbes et du Pacifique (ACP) signataires des accords de Lomé. À rebours du versement de subventions modiques et accidentelles, il plaide en faveur du « renforcement d’un potentiel scientifique et technique endogène », les systèmes nationaux de recherche ayant vocation à assurer la relève des institutions internationales ou européennes héritées de la période coloniale.

Son intérêt marqué pour l’agriculture méditerranéenne l’amène à assumer en parallèle les fonctions de président du Comité consultatif scientifique (1978-1985), puis de secrétaire général (1985-1991) du Centre international de hautes études agronomiques méditerranéennes (CIHEAM), dont il conseille l’Institut de Saragosse depuis sa création en 1963.

Au début des années 1990, il accomplit d’autre part plusieurs missions à titre privé. Dans le cadre des Groupes d’études et de mobilisation (GEM) lancés par Édith Cresson, il accepte de présider, en 1992, un groupe de travail sur les biotechnologies et leurs enjeux pour les industries agroalimentaires, composé d’une vingtaine de membres issus de l’industrie, de la recherche et de l’administration. Peu après, il se rend par deux fois en Mauritanie, fin 1992 et fin 1993, pour y mener une action de coopération, financée par la Caisse française de développement, visant à accompagner la réorganisation du ministère du Développement rural et de l’Environnement de ce pays.

Parallèlement à ses différentes fonctions professionnelles, il participe régulièrement aux activités de la Section française de l’Internationale ouvrière (SFIO), à laquelle il adhère dès 1936, puis du Parti socialiste (PS). Au sein des commissions Agriculture, Recherche et Tiers-Monde, ou dans un contexte plus informel, il rédige de nombreux rapports et notes, parmi lesquels le manifeste Pour une autre agriculture avec les socialistes édité à l’occasion de l’élection présidentielle de 1981. Dans les années 1960, et surtout 1970, il prépare également, pour le compte d’une douzaine de parlementaires, des dizaines de questions écrites au gouvernement, portant sur les moyens alloués à l’INRA ou sur les grandes orientations de la politique agricole. « Viscéralement socialiste », il revendique ainsi dans ses mémoires le « couplage de [s]es préoccupations professionnelles et de [s]on engagement politique » comme « une constante de [s]a vie active » (volume inédit intitulé Politique II. Deuxième partie : Raymond Février, p. 14 et 82).

Celle-ci terminée, il continue de siéger à l’Académie d’agriculture de France, dont il est membre depuis 1981 et qu’il préside l’année 1999.

Raymond Février est officier de la Légion d’honneur, grand-croix de l’ordre national du Mérite, et commandeur des Palmes académiques et du Mérite agricole.


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This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, ShareAlike (BY-SA) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak and build upon the licensed object, even for commercial purposes, as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence, and you license your adaptations of the object under the same terms.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, No Derivates (BY-ND) licence. You can copy and redistribute the object, even commercially, as long as no alteration is made to the object and you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

If you remix, transform or build upon the object, you may not distribute the modified material.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, Non-Commercial (BY-NC) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the licensed object for non-commercial use only and as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, Non-Commercial, ShareAlike (BY-NC-SA) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the licensed object for non-commercial use only, as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence, and as long as you license your adaptations of the object under the same terms.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, Non-Commercial, No Derivates (BY-NC-ND) licence. You can copy and redistribute the object for non-commercial use only, as long as no alteration is made to the object and as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

If you remix, transform or build upon the object, you may not distribute the modified material.

This object is in the public domain, but has been digitised as the outcome of a public-private partnership, where the terms of the contractual agreement limit commercial use for a certain period of time. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the object for non-commercial use only.

This object has been identified as an Orphan Work in the country of first publication and in line with the requirements of the national law implementing Directive 2012/28/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on certain permitted uses of orphan works.

You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy or moral rights.

This object is in the public domain, but is subject to known legal restrictions other than copyright which prevent its free re-use. Please contact the providing institution for more information.

This object is currently in copyright. Please contact the providing institution for more information and in order to acquire additional permissions for re-use.

The copyright status of this object has not been evaluated yet. Please contact the providing institution for more information.

You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy, or moral rights.

This object is currently in copyright and the rights holder(s) have allowed re-use for educational purposes only. You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy or moral rights.

Please contact the providing institution for more information and in order to acquire additional permissions for any other uses.

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