By Busani Bafana
October 6, 2008
via CheckBiotech
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (SA) - As Africa grapples with the question of food insecurity, biotechnology buffs seem to have an answer: genetically modified crops that could feed a continent vulnerable to famine and food deficits. But environmentalists warn of new dangers.
An appeal board
recently overturned opposition from the South African GMO Executive Council to
allow testing of a nutritionally enhanced, genetically modified sorghum, known
as 'Super Sorghum' in greenhouses in
The application by the Council for Scientific Industrial
Research (CSIR) - and endorsed by
Genetic modification involves identifying the genetic codes
for specific traits in plants or animals and removing or exchanging them to
create varieties with desired characteristics. Biosafety refers to the safe
transfer, handling, and use of any living modified organism resulting from
biotechnology.
The battle between supporters and critics of genetically
modified (GM) crops that promise higher yields, better resistance to pests or
adaptability to a changing climate is expected to increase in intensity should
this trial move from the greenhouse to the fields.
Biotechnologists and scientists are celebrating the decision
to license the CSIR to develop 'Super Sorghum' under the "African
Biofortified Sorghum" (ABS) project which received a 16.9 million dollar
grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The aim of the ABS Project is
to "develop sorghum with improved food quality by enriching it for
essential amino acids (part of the protein component of the diet), and later by
increasing its content in essential vitamins (vitamin A and E)."
"This process proves that
The pro-GM lobby argues that while sorghum is one of the few
crops that grows well in arid parts of
Mazithulela says the CSIR and its consortium partners
support biosafety. They are undertaking additional measures to satisfy
regulators and the public that the work conducted is ethical, conforms to the
highest safety levels, and is in the interests of the public.
"The consortium has already started investigating some
fundamental questions in genetics of sorghum as an additional contribution to
knowledge in this area," said Mazithulela. "Scientific progress will
be documented for scientific review and the organisation will keep the
Minister's advisory panel abreast of developments."
The African Centre for Biosafety (ACB), which objected to
the CSIR's 2006 application, condemns the decision, stating that
experimentation with GM sorghum will inevitably result in the contamination of
"The risks posed by GM sorghum to wild and weedy
relatives cannot be tolerated at all and the granting of this permit is
tantamount to a licence to taint
Sorghum is the main food source for more than 100 million
farmers in Sub-Saharan African according to the Pantancheru, India-based
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, a research
organisation focused on the needs of the poor.
The ACB says the ABS project is being developed for
commercial release and the CSIR will be seeking permission for field trials
soon.
"It is a done deal," Swanby told IPS,
"However this permit is for experimentation in a contained environment.
The next permit application will be for open field trials and we will fight
that application hard."
Research released this year - carried out under the auspices
of the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and accepted by 58
countries, including
More than 400 contributors were involved in producing
International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology (IAASTD) draft
report, drawing on the evidence and assessments of thousands of experts
worldwide. The IAASTD was launched as an intergovernmental process, with a
multi-stakeholder Bureau, under the co-sponsorship of the FAO, GEF, UNDP, UNEP,
UNESCO, the World Bank and WHO.
Elfrieda Pschorn-Strauss, programme officer for GRAIN
Africa, an organisation that promotes the sustainable management and use of
agricultural biodiversity, says, "It is not for the South African
government to decide, on behalf of the rest of Africa, that they may approve an
industrial project which will result in the inevitable contamination of
But according to biotechnologist Wynand van der Walt, modern
biotechnology application, especially used in agriculture, food science,
bio-processing, and medicine, offers opportunities to ensure food security in
Foods from GM crops, Dr. van de Walt, says have been
consumed by over 3 billion people on all continents and there are no
substantiated cases of negative impact on human health or the environment. On
the contrary, GM crops have ensured substantial reduction in pesticide use
(some 290,000 tons) to the benefit of humans and the environment.
"We have high food prices and high food
insecurity," van der Walt says. "We cannot wait for long term policy
discussions. The urgency is now and all of us have an obligation to go out and
communicate and counter the misinformation we face every day about GM
crops."
Source: Inter Press Service
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