AUTHORITIES charged with biotech crop production have been urged by environmental scientists to strengthen and modernise their regulatory “framework”.
This, they were told, will boost public and farmers confidence on Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) technology.
Dr Gregory Kaebnick, a research scholar
at The Hastings Centre, said here recently that Tanzania and other
African countries can try the technology, but warned that any
“regulatory mismatch” will have a huge problem on human, environment,
economy and food security.
Many African countries have been
reluctant to permit genetically engineered crops and animals to be grown
or imported, but opposition has softened amid punishing drought and
escalating food demand.
With genetically engineered crops
already making their way towards Tanzanian plates, the government
approved its first research trial (confined field trial) in October last
year, planting genetically modified maize, an initiative that
supporters believe will provide prospects to the technology advancement
across the continent.
“There are 3000 GM food types in the
market, all made with different technologies and different genomes ...
all these increase complexity and therefore the need to strengthen
regulatory frameworks,” the Scientist said during a Pre-conference
Symposium on New Genetic Technologies: Ethical Debates and Global
Science Policy.
The symposium is part of the 10th World
Conference of Science Journalists taking place in San Francisco,
California, organised by the Council for Advancement of Science Writing
(CASW), National Association of Science Writers (NASW) and World
Federation of Science Journalists (WFSJ).
“It is not bad giving the technology a
trial, but all the research work must be transparent and inclusive,” he
added. The confined field trial, a pre-cursor to commercialisation, is
being implemented under a public-private partnership arrangement.
It brings nongovernmental organisations
as well as philanthropist through the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation, Howard G. Buffett Foundation and United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) and funded by Water Efficient Maize
for Africa (WEMA) project. The projects aim however is to reduce crop
failure by introducing conventional and GM maize hybrids for smallholder
farmers.
Recently, the multinational agricultural
biotechnology company, Monsanto announced that it plans to open a GMO
seeds production facility in Arusha after initial trials of its seeds
showed drought-tolerance and increased demands for high-tech improved
seeds to local farmers.
Daily News reported this year that
Monsanto Tanzania had injected more than 3,000 tonnes of GMO seeds into
the local market targeting smallholder farmers
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