Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Gates Foundation's agriculture aid a hard sell

from The Seattle Times

By Kristi Heim

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is dramatically expanding its efforts to help the world's poorest farmers, with goals every bit as ambitious as its better-known global-health work fighting diseases such as AIDS and malaria.

But the foundation's nascent agricultural program is encountering more resistance than much of its other work, with critics concerned that its market-oriented, technology-centric approach will open the door to big agribusiness interests and genetically engineered food.

The Gates Foundation began making grants a year and a half ago, spending $350 million so far. Its aim is to radically boost farm productivity in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia in a short time by introducing new seed varieties, irrigation, fertilizer, training for farmers and access to local and international markets.

The foundation explored how it could address poverty for about two years before settling on agriculture, seeing it as a natural extension of its work in health: It's no use curing disease only to see a child starve.

"This is not just about helping very poor people grow a little more food," said Rajiv Shah, the director of agriculture programs for the Gates Foundation. "This is about transforming agricultural economies so people can move on with their lives."

In the poorest countries, 65 percent of jobs are in farming. Yet Africa's share of food production is shrinking, and the number of people who are hungry is going up — in sharp contrast to improvements in the rest of the world.

Wars and drought are partly to blame, but so is a lack of assistance for farmers and investment in agriculture, Shah says.

In sub-Saharan Africa, more than 200 million people are hungry or malnourished — one-third of the population.

It's uncertain whether even the wealthiest private foundation can spur change where decades of aid and development work have failed and people have learned to distrust the rosy promises of outsiders. The wrong steps could end up exacerbating their problems, critics say.

"What is at stake here is the very future of the continent's agricultural practices — what is grown, how it is grown, who gets to grow it, who processes it, who sells it and ... how much the African consumer will pay," Kenyan political columnist Mukoma Wa Ngugi wrote in December in a critique of the foundation's work.

"Hot potato"

The Gates Foundation made its first foray into agriculture in 2006 with a $100 million grant to create an initiative with the Rockefeller Foundation called the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA).

Based in Nairobi, AGRA took as its model the original Green Revolution, which helped relieve widespread famine in the 1940s through the 1960s by boosting production of maize, wheat and rice in Latin America and Asia.

Part of the controversy lies in the Gates Foundation's choosing that approach.

Using strains of crops that required fertilizer, pesticides and irrigation, the Green Revolution methods increased yields. But they also damaged the environment, favored wealthier farmers and left some poorer ones deeper in debt.

Critics worry AGRA will repeat those mistakes in Africa.

"I wouldn't say [the Green Revolution is] universally reviled, but it's certainly a hot potato when it comes to agricultural development," said Britt Yamamoto, professor of Environment and Community at Antioch University Seattle.

"Personally I was a little surprised they would embrace that and not try to capitalize on the recognition that sustainable agriculture is possible and needs to incorporate politics and society to have a broader focus, not just a technical approach."

Eric Holt-Gimenez, executive director of Food First/Institute for Food Development and Policy, a California think tank, was more blunt. "It's a corporate strategy for colonizing Africa's food and agriculture systems, which thus far have resisted," he said.

Food First was among the sponsors of a weeklong conference in Mali in November to promote alternatives to AGRA, attracting 100 organizations concerned with maintaining local control over food.

In December, Shah flew to Portugal during an African leaders summit, meeting with government officials and activist groups who oppose the foundation's work. He said the exchange shows how the foundation is listening to its critics.

"It was a fantastic conversation," said Shah, a young medical doctor with an economics degree and background in health policy. "When you get people from all walks of life and different perspectives together in a room, we realize we all care about the same things."

Opinions vary widely on how to help the poorest farmers in the world — most of whom are women — escape poverty.

Catherine Bertini, who joined the Gates Foundation last June, spent a decade directing the U.N. World Food Program. She thinks there are two reasons why earlier programs haven't been successful:

"They've not been supportive of the roles of women, who are such vast players in agriculture," she said. "And they haven't done enough work at the community level understanding the needs before they start spending money."

Permanent solutions

At a village in rural Uganda recently, Shah sat on the ground with a group of women readying large, round banana-tree bulbs for planting. A staple crop, the banana trees had been suffering from bacterial wilt that cut fruit harvests in half.

Shah was trying to learn what might improve the women's lives.

A USAID government program to help them through the crisis was set to expire early this year, just one more well-intentioned project these farmers have seen come and go over the years, with nothing permanent to relieve their grinding poverty.

The women asked him to do something that would last. Back in Seattle, he took that as a fundamental lesson. "We talk about that every single day with every single project," he said.

The Gates Foundation initially focused on developing new seeds. But over the last year it has broadened its strategy to include what it calls the entire "agricultural value chain."

With an $8 million grant from Gates, the U.S.-based National Cooperative Business Association is organizing about 35,000 cotton growers in Mozambique, who typically work plots of 2 acres, to combine their harvests and sell to the world's largest private cotton merchandiser, Dunavant Enterprises in Memphis.

The five-year program, which Shah says is projected to raise the incomes of farmers from $225 per year to about $302 per year, also provides access to credit, literacy training and planting expertise.

The foundation is also backing irrigation programs, such as a low-cost drip system created by the U.S. nonprofit International Development Enterprise (IDE). It consists of plastic piping and a human-powered pump that operates with a foot pedal. The system reduces the cost of irrigation from about $6,000 per acre to about $37, IDE says.

Irrigation allows farmers to grow fruits and vegetables, improving their diet beyond subsistence crops. But only about 7 percent of the land in sub-Saharan Africa is irrigated.

Crop controversy

The area that has generated the most controversy is Gates' involvement in genetic modification of crops.

Through its global health program, it has helped fund $37 million in grants for genetic-engineering research aimed at developing plants that carry more nutrition.

One project by a team at Ohio State University is attempting to modify cassava, the starchy root that provides basic sustenance for millions in Africa, in order to increase key vitamins and minerals and extend its shelf life.

Another project by DuPont subsidiary Pioneer Hi-Bred, A Harvest of Kenya and a South African research council aims to genetically engineer a new variety of sorghum, dubbed "super sorghum," that has more vitamins and protein and is easier to digest.

In the future, drought-tolerant varieties of maize could lead to big increases in food supply and incomes of poor farmers in parts of Africa, Shah said.

The Gates Foundation, whose science-and-technology efforts are led by a former Monsanto researcher, is helping African governments develop biosafety standards and regulations and training local researchers in the latest plant breeding.

Such work is paving the way for "profit-hungry corporations vying to control the seed market in African countries," wrote Kenyan columnist Ngugi, "which will harm indigenous seeds and biodiversity."

The situation was further complicated when former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, now chairman of AGRA's board, made a statement that African journalists interpreted as rejecting the use of genetically modified seeds.

The Gates Foundation later said Annan was misquoted.

Although the scientific data on genetically engineered crops and the legal framework to support their use in Africa are several years away, Shah said the Gates Foundation intends to pursue those options.

"We don't want to take anything off the table," Shah said. "Over time we will explore and use those types of technologies."

This worries Joshua Machinga, a Kenyan farmer who works with the nonprofit Common Ground Program. Farmers share local seeds with other farmers and cannot afford to buy seeds, let alone more expensive transgenic varieties that often require fertilizer and pesticide, he said.

"People do not know the hidden agenda behind it," he said, "that once they get the high-yielding seed, they have to keep buying it. Once you get in the system, then getting out becomes difficult."

Doug Gurian-Sherman, senior scientist with the Union of Concerned Scientists, said that while genetically modified crops might work in some situations, it's unwise to devote limited attention and resources to unproven technology when basic things like roads and storage and distribution are underfunded.

Ultimately, it will be a decision for African governments and farmers, Shah said.

"Our goal is to develop things that help small farmers lead better lives. If it doesn't help small farmers, we are not interested."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Profits Rule NOT Sustainability

On 17th December 2007 Monsanto was found guilty of contempt of the South African Advertising Authority (ASA) for publishing false claims about the safety of GM foods.

In January,2007, Monsanto was fined 15,000 euros (US$19,000 ) in a French court for misleading the public about the environmental impact of herbicide Roundup.

A former chairman of Monsanto Agriculture France was found guilty of false advertising for presenting Roundup as biodegradable and claiming that it left the soil clean after use. Monsanto's French distributor Scotts France was also fined 15,000 euros.

In 2005 Monsanto was caught smuggling South African produced GM Bollgard cotton seed into Indonesia disguised as rice. Monsanto was fined for bribing Indonesian officials.

In 2006 Monsanto suppressed evidence of serious damage to the liver and kidneys of rats in their MON 863 GM maize trials until ordered to release this evidence by a German Court.

In June, 2007, a second peer-reviewed case involving another variation of Monsanto's GM maize, namely, NK 603, has been shown by studies to be potentially toxic to humans. NK 603 has been approved for food, feed, processing, and propagation in Europe and the Philippines The new research, carried out by the French scientific research institute CRIGEN, involves biotech firm Monsanto's NK 603 GMO corn (marketed commercially under the name Round-up Ready).

Rats that were fed GM maize showed significant differences in measurements, as well as significant weight differences compared to those fed with normal maize. Almost 70 statistically significant differences were observed and reported - 12 for hematology parameters, 18 for clinical chemistry parameters, nine for urine chemistry parameters, six for the organ weights (brain, heart, liver), 14 for body weights and body weight changes, and eight for food consumption. toxicity, The most alarming was the diminished brain size. Scientists warned that diminished brain size sent out a urgent danger warning for growing children fed `GM food.

Unknown said...

According to two recent government studies (Austria and Italy), the consumption of Monsanto GE corn (NK603 and MON810) caused infertility (Austria) and immunodeficiency (Italy), in the latter case a sharp drop in the CD4+ count, the marker used to put millions of allegedly HIV positive people on ARVs, which bodes the question and calls for an urgent investigation to which all these allegedly HIV positive people are reacting when subjected to HIV testing - HIV or a toxic reaction to Monsanto's maize, which in addition to antibiotic-resistant marker genes also contains the cauliflower mosaic virus, which is closely related to the Hepatitis B and HIV virus and has been fed to South Africans without the latter's knowledge and above all CONSENT, which constitutes a blatant violation of our constitutional rights to bodily integrity.
A few months ago, the Sunday Times revealed that according to tests conducted by the University of the Free State, one infants' cereal contained a staggering 97.5% of GMOs. This is downright CRIMINAL! In response to the Sunday Times' question whether South African consumers would like to be informed about GMOs in their food, I sent them the following letter:

"The question whether South African consumers would like to be informed about GMOs in their food should not even arise given the fact that the right to a healthy environment and healthy food, the right to information and informed choice as well as participation in decision-making processes is enshrined in our constitution. The decision-makers in our government have violated and keep violating our constitutional rights by force-feeding the citizens of this nation with untested and toxic genetically modified organisms without our knowledge and consent. The latter, one would assume, is the underlying concept of a democratic government elected by and for the people, resting upon the consent of the governed. Instead, this government keeps violating the individual’s human right to bodily integrity, the latter being the most significant provision of the Nuremberg Code, which sets forth the legal requirements for human experimentation, i.e. “ voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential”. Likewise, the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares bodily integrity central to both human rights and human dignity and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights unmistakably declares that “no one shall be subjected without his free consent to medical or scientific experimentation”. By deliberately ignoring the precautionary principle enshrined in the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, to which South Africa is signatory and refusing to implement mandatory labelling of GM products, this government allows its citizens to be used as guinea pigs of multinational biotech companies, sacrificing the nation’s health for corporate greed.
It is absolutely shocking that people like Andries Pretorius from the Department of Health keep parroting the scientifically nonsensical utterances of the well-remunerated spin doctors of biotech companies, i.e. that GM foodstuffs are considered to be substantially equivalent to their traditional counterparts and therefore safe for human consumption. GM food products contain antibiotic resistant marker genes, viral promoters and foreign proteins never before consumed by humans and not found in crops produced through normal means of hybridization. The concept of “substantial equivalence” is by no means based on evidence-based science but was coined by scientifically-illiterate lawyers of biotech companies and written into law by HW Bush senior, who issued an Executive Order proclaiming GM plants to be “substantially equivalent” to their traditional counterparts and therefore not needing any special health safety study or testing. And this is exactly the crux of the matter – no human safety study has ever been conducted, except for one small “study” – referred to as the Newcastle Feeding Study – conducted in 2003, which proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that even after one small meal containing GM soya, transgenes could transfer out of GM food into gut bacteria at detectable levels.
There is now overwhelming evidence documented in scientific literature of deaths attributable to GM products. A study conducted by Russian scientist Irina Ermakova showed that 55% of the offspring of rats fed on GM soya died within 3 weeks of birth. Monsanto’s GM maize NK603 is and has been eaten in SA for years. Results of an analysis of Monsanto's test data, carried out by the French scientific research institute CRIIGEN, showed that rats that were fed the GM maize exhibited differences in their kidney, brain, heart and liver measurements, as well as significant weight differences compared to those fed with normal maize. Almost 70 statistically significant differences were observed and reported - 12 for hematology parameters, 18 for clinical chemistry parameters, nine for urine chemistry parameters, six for the organ weights (brain, heart, liver), 14 for body weights and body weight changes, and eight for food consumption. Austria most recently joined the ranks of other European countries banning the import and growing of Monsanto’s GM maize MON 863 on health safety grounds. According to tests carried out by Professor Gilles Eric Seralini, a French government advisor on genetic engineering, recently published in the journal “Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology” rats fed on Monsanto’s MON 863 suffered liver and kidney damage. In addition to banning MON 863, Austria has already banned growing Monsanto’s MON 810 maize, as have France, Hungary, Italy, Greece and Poland over health safety concerns.
Does Andries Pretorius really live under the arrogant misconception that the people of this nation are stupid and naïve enough to believe his Kindergarten explanation about GM foods, i.e. “that they only contain inserted bacterial genes”?! If he genuinely believes in that myth, then he should vacate his position with immediate effect on grounds of incompetence and ignorance. His “Alice in Wonderland” approach leads to the conclusion that he has never heard of horizontal gene transfer and viral promoters used in genetic engineering either. Horizontal gene transfer, i.e. the transfer of genes by vectors (viruses and other infectious diseases) designed to cross species barriers enhance the potential for creating new viral and bacterial pathogens and will inevitably result in the creation of superbugs and multi-drug resistant diseases. Naked viral DNA (virus without its viral coat) is even more infectious and may well be taken up by mammalian cells, including ours! In addition, viral DNA has shown to resist digestion in the gut of mice, enters the blood stream to infect white blood cells, spleen and liver cells. One such virus most commonly used as a promoter in genetic engineering is the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV), which – due to its recombination hotspot –is prone to break and join with other DNA to integrate into the cell’s genome, which could activate host genes and lead to cancer. CaMV is closely related to the Hepatitis B and HIV virus and due to its ability to propagate in plant and insect hosts after recombination may also recombine with related Hepatitis B and HIV to create a most powerful disease in a large number of people consuming large numbers of virus genes incorporated into crop plants. In South Africa, the number of people at risk could not get any larger, since our government unilaterally decided without the peoples’ knowledge and above all consent to grow our staple food (white maize) in genetically modified form without adhering to the precautionary principle. One does not need a PhD in genetics to see the correlation between the consumption of GMOs and the sharp rise in HIV infections and multi-drug resistant tuberculosis and other diseases. The decision-makers in our government and biotech companies that keep violating our human right to bodily integrity and freedom of choice by unleashing these toxins into our environment and food chain and refusing to implement mandatory labelling of GMOs must be held accountable and should be charged with criminal negligence, the latter most probably the main reason for their refusal to label these toxins. South African consumers must boycott all supermarkets and food manufacturers selling products containing genetically modified maize and other GM products.
Ingrid Blank/Merrivale

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is the proverbial Trojan horse planted on the African continent. The true reason behind the onslaught on the African continent of this self-anointed benefactor of mankind are summarized in this excellent article (http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/18369)
and I urge everyone to tell Bill Gates and his genocidal playmates - HANDS OFF AFRICA!

Ingrid Blank/Merrivale