15 varieties |
The National Committee on Varieties registration has
restated that all the Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) that would be released
into Nigeria market must be duly registered by them in accordance to bio safety
procedures just as they have registered and released about fifteen new improved
crop varieties with none from the GMOs.
All the members of the National Committee on the Naming,
Registration and Release of crops varieties at the just concluded meeting at
National Centre for Genetic Resources and Biotechnology (NACGRAB) in Ibadan have
insisted that any GMO products in the country must be duly registered and released
by them saying there is none of the products in circulation for now.
Members who are purely researchers and scientist from
various Research Institutes and International Centres pointed that Nigerians
must separate themselves from political aggrandizement that have been attached
to the embracement of the improved technologies between Europe and America saying
that Nigeria must not be left out in any agricultural and food improved
technology that would enhance productivity and remove drudgery in farming
occasioned by pest and diseases.
The scientists and other stakeholders assured Nigerians that
there is no GMO in the circulations presently, pointed that the few ones around
are still going through on farm trails in our National Research Institutes with
hundred percent involvements of Nigeria researchers following the bio safety
procedures adding all the gene characters development have put into
consideration the nation’s ecologies adaptability following bio safety procedures.
One of the scientists said that “Presently there no
commercial GMO products in the country. This is the reason why the gene
character construction levels to ensure adaptation is done by scientists from
our Research Institutes. For five years Prof. Ishiaku has been working on
cowpea. We are actually doing the research here in Nigeria. No already
commercialized GMO products are being brought into the country’s market. We are
already developing ours here. Cowpea is about going on farm and very soon it would
be registered by 2017. It is a collaborative effort and by 2017 we will have
our own GMO products that will be safe for us”
Meanwhile, the National Committee has approved the release
and registration of new 15 improved crops varieties for their productivity
improvement at the 13th October meeting held at NACGRAB. Among these
are five (5) hybrid white yam, two (2) maize hybrid and another two (2) maize
varieties, two (2) cowpea varieties, two (2) rice varieties, one(1) pureline
Amaranthus variety and one (1) pureline okro variety.
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