(Press-News.org) The world can only meet its future food needs through innovation, including the use of agricultural biotechnology, a Harvard development specialist said today.
Since their commercial debut in the mid-1990s, genetically-designed crops have added about $100 billion to world crop output, avoided massive pesticide use and greenhouse gas emissions, spared vast tracts of land and fed millions of additional people worldwide, said Professor Calestous Juma of the Harvard Kennedy School's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.
Speaking to graduates of McGill University, Montreal, Juma asked youth to embrace innovative sciences that alone will make it possible to feed the billions who will swell world population in decades ahead, especially in developing countries.
And he described the importance of developing more productive or nutritious and insect-resistant crops.
"As the world's food challenges increase, so must humanity enlarge its toolbox to include genetic modification and other technologies such as satellites for monitoring land resources," Juma said. "But these techniques are not silver bullets. They must be part of a wider system of innovation that includes improving interactions between academia, government, business and farmers."
From 1996 to 2011, he said, transgenic crops "saved nearly 473 million kg (1 billion pounds) of active pesticide ingredients. It also reduced 23.1 billion kg (51 billion pounds) of carbon dioxide, the equivalent of taking 10.2 million cars off the road. Without transgenic crops, the world would have needed another 108.7 million hectares of land (420,000 square miles -- roughly the area of Ethiopia) for the same level of output," he said.
"The benefits to biological diversity from the technology have therefore been invaluable. On the economic front, nearly 15 million farmers and their families, estimated at 50 million people, have benefited from the adoption of transgenic crops."
However, of the 28 countries today growing transgenic crops, only four (South Africa, Burkina Faso, Egypt, and Sudan) are in Africa, said Juma, a national of Kenya who is professor of the practice of international development and director of the Kennedy School's Science, Technology and Globalization Project.
Cited as examples of important transgenic plant science innovations in Africa to date:
A moth-like insect, Maruca vitrata, destroys nearly US$300 million worth of black-eyed pea crops every year, despite the annual use of US$500 million in imported pesticides. Not only are the hearty, drought-resistant black-eyed peas important in local diets, they're a major export -- Africa grows 96% of the 5.4 million tons consumed worldwide each year.
Scientists at Nigeria's Ahmadu Bello University have developed a transgenic black-eyed pea variety using insecticide genes from a bacteria, Bacillus thuringiensis.
In Uganda, meanwhile, scientists are deploying biotechnology against the problem of Xanthomonas wilt, a bacterial disease that ruins bananas and costs Africa's Great Lakes Region an estimated US$500 million annually, largely in Uganda.Using genes from a species of sweet pepper, Ugandan researchers are developing a transgenic banana that resists the disease.
Other scientists in Uganda have developed Golden Bananas that offer enhanced content of Vitamin A, important for growth and development, a healthy immune system and vision.
Kenyan scientists, meanwhile, are also enhancing the micronutrient content of bananas as well as two other staples -- sorghum and cassava.
"The techniques mastered in these proof-of-concept states can be extended to a wide range of indigenous African crops," said Juma. "This would not only help Africa broaden its food base using improved indigenous crops, but it would have the potential to contribute to global nutritional requirements."
Delays in subjecting these products for testing and approval for commercial use is due in part to "technological intolerance," he said, "much of which has been handed down by European anti-biotechnology activism. This opposition, however vexatious, amounts to petty political mischief."
Juma cited the 1878 essay by Robert Louis Stevenson, A Plea for Gas Lamps, in which the author of The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde demonized electricity, saying that the "urban star now shines out nightly, horrible, unearthly, obnoxious to the human eye; a lamp for a nightmare! Such a light as this should shine only on murders and public crime or along the corridors of lunatic asylums, a horror to heighten horror."
The same sort of misguided opposition today confronts biotechnology, Juma said.
Today, "given the growing human population, the problem is to feed people. However, opposition to new technologies may cast a dark shadow over the prospects of feeding the world."
Citing Africa's weak systems of agricultural innovation are characterized by separation of research, teaching, extension, and commercialization, Juma called for:
Greater research functions at agricultural universities and strengthened linkages to farming communities; and
National agricultural research institutions (NARIs) to teach the full value chains of specific commodities. "Connecting NARIs to farmers in the private sector through extension services and commercialization projects would result in agricultural entrepreneurship."
In 2011, Juma published an influential book, The New Harvest (http://hvrd.me/14MuOGn) in which he proposes a route by which Africa could feed itself within a generation -- a clear prescription for transforming Sub-Saharan Africa's agriculture and, by doing so, its economy.
The strategy calls on governments to make African agricultural expansion central to decision making about infrastructure (energy, transportation, irrigation and telecommunications), technical education, entrepreneurship and regional economic integration. (See also http://bit.ly/134nNyN)
The Grow Africa venture is sponsored by the African Union, the World Economic Forum and the New Partnership for Africa's Development.
Juma co-chairs the High-Level Panel on Science, Technology and Innovation of the African Union. The panel will present its report for consideration by African presidents. It contents will serve a blueprint for Africa's technological transformation over the next decade.
He has been elected to the Royal Society of London, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the The World Academy of Sciences (TWAS), the UK Royal Academy of Engineering, the African Academy of Sciences and the New York Academy of Sciences. In 2012, Juma was named by New Africa magazine as one of Africa's 100 most influential people. (Wikipedia: http://bit.ly/Zkvx2i; on Twitter: @calestous)
INFORMATION:
Harvard development expert: Agricultural innovation offers only path to feed Africa and the world
The world can only meet its future food needs through innovation, including biotechnology: Kenya-born Harvard professor Calestous Juma
2013-06-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
EORTC study shows radiotherapy and surgery provide regional control for breast cancer patients
2013-06-03
Final analysis of the EORTC 10981-22023 AMAROS (After Mapping of the Axilla: Radiotherapy Or Surgery?) trial has shown that both axillary lymph node dissection and axillary radiotherapy provide excellent regional control for breast cancer patients with a positive sentinel node biopsy. The AMAROS trial also found that axillary radiotherapy reduces the risk of short term and long-term lymphoedema as compared to axillary lymph node dissection.
Prof. Emiel J. Rutgers of The Netherlands Cancer Institute-Antoni Van Leeuwenhoekziekenhuis in Amsterdam, the EORTC Breast Cancer ...
Songbirds may give insight to nature vs. nuture
2013-06-03
VIDEO:
This is the article as it appears in JoVE Behavior.
Click here for more information.
On June 3rd, JoVE will publish a research technique that allows neural imaging of auditory stimuli in songbirds via MRI. The technique, developed by Dr. Annemie Van der Linden and her laboratory at the University of Antwerp in Belgium, will be one of the first published in JoVE Behavior, a new section of the video journal that focuses on observational and experimental techniques that ...
Scientists develop new technique to selectively dampen harmful immune responses
2013-06-03
LA JOLLA, CA – June 3, 2013 – The human immune system is remarkably efficient, but sometimes its attack is misdirected, leading to allergies, autoimmune diseases and rejection of transplant organs and therapeutic drugs. Current immune suppressants have major drawbacks, but a team from The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) has demonstrated a new technique that may lead to a better way to selectively repress unwanted immune reactions without disabling the immune system as a whole.
As a proof of principle, the study, reported online ahead of print on June 3, 2013, by the ...
Lightest exoplanet imaged so far?
2013-06-03
Although nearly a thousand exoplanets have been detected indirectly — most using the radial velocity or transit methods [1] — and many more candidates await confirmation, only a dozen exoplanets have been directly imaged. Nine years after ESO's Very Large Telescope captured the first image of an exoplanet, the planetary companion to the brown dwarf 2M1207 (eso0428 - http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso0428/), the same team has caught on camera what is probably the lightest of these objects so far [2][3].
"Direct imaging of planets is an extremely challenging technique that ...
Addressing biodiversity data quality is a community-wide effort
2013-06-03
Improving data quality in large online data access facilities depends on a combination of automated checks and capturing expert knowledge, according to a paper published in the open-access journal Zookeys. The authors, from the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) welcome a recent paper by Mesibov (2013) highlighting errors in millipede data, but argue that addressing such issues requires the joint efforts of 'aggregators' and the wider expert community.
The paper notes that aggregations of data openly exposed in facilities ...
Molecular switch for cheaper biofuel
2013-06-03
Lignocellulosic waste such as sawdust or straw can be used to produce biofuel – but only if the long cellulose and xylan chains can be successfully broken down into smaller sugar molecules. To do this, fungi are used which, by means of a specific chemical signal, can be made to produce the necessary enzymes. Because this procedure is, however, very expensive, Vienna University of Technology has been investigating the molecular switch that regulates enzyme production in the fungus. As a result, it is now possible to manufacture genetically modified fungi that produce the ...
Clinicians often wait for 'red flags' before discussing elderly driving
2013-06-03
AURORA, Colo. (June 3, 2013) – Clinicians often wait too long before talking to elderly patients about giving up driving even though many may be open to those discussions earlier, according to a new study from the University of Colorado School of Medicine and the CU College of Nursing.
"These conversations often don't happen until clinicians see a 'red flag' which could mean an accident or some physical problem that makes driving more difficult for the elderly," said Marian Betz, MD, MPH, at the CU School of Medicine and lead author of the study. "But what's interesting ...
'Back to sleep' does not affect baby's ability to roll
2013-06-03
VIDEO:
Baby Logan shows off his healthy development by rolling from his tummy to his back.
University of Alberta researcher Johanna Darrah, a professor of physical therapy, says infants develop the ability...
Click here for more information.
(Edmonton) Baby, keep on rolling. A campaign to put babies to bed on their backs to reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome has not impaired infants' rolling abilities, according to University of Alberta research.
Johanna Darrah, ...
Salt gets under your skin
2013-06-03
It's time to expand the models for blood pressure regulation, according to clinical pharmacologist Jens Titze, M.D. Titze and his colleagues have identified a new cast of cells and molecules that function in the skin to control sodium balance and blood pressure.
"Hypertension research has traditionally focused on the kidney, blood vessels and brain," said Titze, associate professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University. "But despite massive research efforts, we still do not understand in more than 90 percent of our patients why their blood pressure is elevated. We thought ...
Dartmouth researchers test safety of Nivolumab in kidney cancer
2013-06-03
(Lebanon, NH, 5/24/13) — Researchers at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer Center will present a poster on a phase I clinical trial of Nivolumab, a PD-1 receptor blocking antibody, being used in combination with other drugs in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) at the ASCO Annual Meeting on June 3, 2013.
Metastatic renal cell carcinoma or kidney cancer is the seventh most common cancer, leading to approximately 116,000 deaths annually worldwide. In roughly one-quarter of those with mRCC, the cancer has already spread or metastasized at diagnosis.
Nivolumab ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Mount Sinai experts present research at SLEEP 2025
Medigap protection and plan switching among Medicare advantage enrollees with cancer
Bubbles are key to new surface coating method for lightweight magnesium alloys
Carbon stable isotope values yield different dietary associations with added sugars in children compared to adults
Scientists discover 230 new giant viruses that shape ocean life and health
Hurricanes create powerful changes deep in the ocean, study reveals
Genetic link found between iron deficiency and Crohn’s disease
Biologists target lifecycle of deadly parasite
nTIDE June 2025 Jobs Report: Employment of people with disabilities holds steady in the face of uncertainty
Throughput computing enables astronomers to use AI to decode iconic black holes
Why some kids respond better to myopia lenses? Genes might hold the answer
Kelp forest collapse alters food web and energy dynamics in the Gulf of Maine
Improving T cell responses to vaccines
Nurses speak out: fixing care for disadvantaged patients
Fecal transplants: Promising treatment or potential health risk?
US workers’ self-reported mental health outcomes by industry and occupation
Support for care economy policies by political affiliation and caregiving responsibilities
Mailed self-collection HPV tests boost cervical cancer screening rates
AMS announces 1,000 broadcast meteorologists certified
Many Americans unaware high blood pressure usually has no noticeable symptoms
IEEE study describes polymer waveguides for reliable, high-capacity optical communication
Motor protein myosin XI is crucial for active boron uptake in plants
Ultra-selective aptamers give viruses a taste of their own medicine
How the brain distinguishes between ambiguous hypotheses
New AI reimagines infectious disease forecasting
Scientific community urges greater action against the silent rise of liver diseases
Tiny but mighty: sophisticated next-gen transistors hold great promise
World's first practical surface-emitting laser for optical fiber communications developed: advancing miniaturization, energy efficiency, and cost reduction of light sources
Statins may reduce risk of death by 39% for patients with life-threatening sepsis
Paradigm shift: Chinese scientists transform "dispensable" spleen into universal regenerative hub
[Press-News.org] Harvard development expert: Agricultural innovation offers only path to feed Africa and the worldThe world can only meet its future food needs through innovation, including biotechnology: Kenya-born Harvard professor Calestous Juma