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Biotechnology 'no cure-all' for food insecurity

Ochieng' Ogodo

2008年9月26日 | EN

Tanzanian paprika farmer

Africans, like this Tanzanian paprika farmer, require more access to land and fertilisers to take advantage of the products of biotechnology

USAID

[NAIROBI] Biotechnology is no panacea to the food insecurity and poverty problems in Africa and other developing countries, warned scientists at the first All Africa Congress on Biotechnology in Nairobi, Kenya, this week (23 September).

"This is no silver bullet to the food insecurity in Africa and the rest of the developing world, but it must be looked at as one of the most important tools that will contribute to increased food production and thus, poverty reduction," said Clive James, chairman of the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications.

"We have to take the best of conventional technologies like no-till or low-till farming and combine it with biotechnology for increased food production."

James added that ensuring adequate food production for Africa will come out of a package that includes other components like population stabilisation and fair food distribution systems.

Ed Rege of the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute agreed, saying biotechnology "will require other tools, like the right infrastructure, policy and legal framework, to work".

He added that scientists also need to work out how new biotechnology can complement existing agricultural and health techniques.

For the Africa Union's Sarah Olembo, biotechnology is only one of many issues that need to be addressed to improve sustainable agriculture in Africa.

"For instance, we need to empower farmers, especially women who form the bulk of smallholder farmers in Africa, to acquire inputs like fertilisers and access to land if [the products of] biotechnology [are] to thrive," she said.

Paul Gwakisa of Tanzania's Sokoine University said, "Today, you can't talk about an animal vaccine or diagnosis without biotechnology, but you have to put in place infrastructure to contain [possible] disasters from this technology that we may not know of [yet]."

Jedidah Kongoro of Kenya's Kenyatta University agreed, saying it is important for the authorities handling biotechnology to earn the public's trust.

"Among the challenges facing advancement and use of biotechnology in the developing world is that members of the public do not have trust in the regulatory authorities' capacity to regulate the use of genetically modified organisms and protect them from any potential dangers." 

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