NEWS: GM Crops: The role of agricultural biotechnology in hunger and poverty alleviation for developing countries
AfricaBio (press release via SeedQuest)
March 13, 2007
Excerpt…
Top of the agenda for world leaders today is the alleviation of poverty and hunger, with the goal to cut poverty 50% by 2015. However, as Prof. Diran Makinde, from the School of Agriculture, Rural Development and Forestry of the University of Venda in South Africa, pointed out in his presentation to Biovision, ten years after the 1996 World Food Summit, which promised to reduce the number of undernourished people by half by 2015, there are more hungry people in 2006 than there were in 1996. Prof. Makinde called for new approaches to ensure sustainable food production in developing countries; especially in Africa because the majority of least developed countries are in Africa.
Biovision heard that the estimated overall global economic benefit of GM crops from 1996-2004, amounted to $27 billion, and that 90% of the farmers benefiting from this are resource-poor, small-scale farmers. GM crops have directly contributed to the alleviation of poverty for some 7.7 million farmers.
Makinde referred to a study carried out in South Africa in 2002 in which Bt maize and Bt cotton were compared to non-Bt crop varieties and the Bt varieties, in both cases, were found to produce a higher yield and generate more profits. Two farmers using the technology in South Africa further substantiated these findings, Mr. Motlatsi Musi, a small-scale farmer in Olifantsvlei, South Africa said "I plant Bt maize because it has increased my yield and my income. I earn R3000.00 [$430.00] more from a Bt crop than from a non-Bt crop". Ms. Thandiwe Myeni, a small-scale farmer from Makhatini Flats, South Africa has been planting Bt cotton since 1999 and said "I get more than double yield per hectare from my Bt cotton than from my non-Bt cotton and I am also saving on pesticides by spraying only twice before harvest for Bt cotton, but weekly on my non-Bt cotton".
GM crops are so useful to farmers because they can be engineered to be resistant to diseases and pests and to have increases nutritional value, 'Golden Rice', rice enriched with vitamin A, is an example of this. Most importantly though, is the development and commercialisation of drought-tolerant crops, Makinde said drought-tolerant maize has just been approved to undergo field trials in South Africa and in the next 2 to 3 years drought resistant wheat could be ready for commercialisation in Egypt. The list of benefits doesn't end there, GM crops are also beneficial to the environment, reducing pesticide use for the period 1996 to 2004 by an estimated 172 500 MT, and advances in biotechnology are making it possible to genetically enhance plants to produce pharmaceuticals and vaccines.
Makinde questioned the EU's stance on GM crops asking why, in light of all the aforementioned benefits, they have adopted a 'go-slow' approach? Present EU policies and perceptions make R&D, product development and commercialisation in agricultural biotechnology difficult, especially in developing countries that engage in agricultural trade with the EU. European consumers generally perceive GM foods to be 'contaminated' and therefore developing countries that are dependent on the markets in Europe do not wish to grow them and are losing out on vast socio-economic benefits. There are also issues regarding the strict traceability requirements specified in the EU regulations, which most developing countries will find difficult and costly to implement and are unlikely to measure up to….
Read full article at SeedQuest.
