GMO FOODs |
Forty-three
out of these food-deficient countries are located in African continent, which
has a total of 58 countries. The most affected among the forty-three countries
are in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) where chronic hunger, squalor and abject
poverty are widespread.This is in spite of overall gains recorded in food
production and food security over a decade on a global scale. Last year (2017),
the FAO's Africa Regional Overview of Food Security and Nutrition report indicated
that “The number of undernourished people in sub-Saharan Africa has increased
mainly due to the impact of conflict and climate change with the situation
pointing to the urgent need to build affected communities' resilience and to
find peaceful solutions that strengthen food security”.
GMO Maize |
The report further
stated that “the prevalence of chronic undernourishment appears to have risen
from 20.8 to 22.7 percent between 2015 and 2016”. Dr. Bukar Tijani, FAO Assistant
Director-General and Regional Representative for Africa was quoted saying "The
number of undernourished people rose from 200 to 224 million, accounting for 25
percent of the 815 million people undernourished in the world in 2016”. The
malnourishment of the millions people in Africa is mainly due to low
productivity.
Agricultural productivity in Africa is very low,it is estimated
to range between 300 and 500 kilogram per hectare as compared to the average of
2,500 kilogram per hectare in the United States. This low productivity is
obviously linked to farmers’ poor access to improved inputs such as improved
seeds, fertilizers and pesticides as well as proven and relevant technologies
for increase productivity. FAO reported that the application of fertilizers in
Sub-Sahara Africa is the lowest in the world, put at 11 kilogram per hectare
compared with the world average of 62 kilogram per hectare.
This
gloomy picture is more scaring when one peeps into the future. What does the
future hold for Africa in respect of food security? By United Nation’s
definition, Food security is a condition in which all people, at all times,
have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious
food that meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and
healthy life.
This means that for Africa to achieve food security, all the
people living in Africa must have access to affordable and qualitative food,
which can meet nutritious requirement at all times. Food security requirements
are inclusive and encompassing of women, children and other vulnerable and
disadvantages groups. With this robust definition of food security, it is not
surprise that African with 54 independent countries, four dependent countries,
43 of these countries are classified as low – income and food – deficient
countries representing 50 percent of such countries in the World. In Africa,
some people eat for mere survival as at when food is available and affordable.
So, to achieve food security in Africa now and in the future, it is pertinent
to consider the population in Africa.
Today,
the African continent houses about 1.3 billion people, which is a distant
second to Asia with 4.5 billion people out of the total World population of 7.6
billion people as at June 2018 according to www.worldmeters.com. African population is equivalent to 16.6
percent of the total World population.
By 2050, the World population is
estimated to be around 9.8 billion people with people living in Africa as 2.5
billion people. This figure will almost double the current population of the
region. Most African countries are expected to almost double their population
by the year 2050. However, Nigeria is expected to almost triple its population,
as the country is estimated to have 450 million people by 2050 from the current
population estimate of 195 million people. Nigeria will be the third most
populous country after India and China. India is likely to be the most populous
country with China holding the second position in 2050.
Reflecting
back in the 1960s, the population in Africa was merely 285 million people,
which quadrupled to become 1.3 billion people today. Globally, the population
growth rates are slowing down, however, the populations of some African
countries particularly Sub-Saharan Africa are still expanding by about 3
percent a year, enough to double the number of people in one generation as
reported by FAO. In contrast, food production in Africa continues to grow more
slowly than population compared to every other region of the world where the
production grows higher than the population increase since the 1970s.
The
foregoing analysis indicates the exponential population increase as a major
factor that must be considered for attainment of food security in any country.
African Population today and tomorrow must be provided with quantitative and
qualitative food to reduce hunger and ultimately achieve food security. This
concern of hunger in Africa is what impelled the Malabo Declaration.
In the
2014 Malabo Declaration, African leaders “reaffirmed the principles and values
of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) and
recommitted their countries to end hunger and halve poverty by 2025, boost
intra-African trade, and enhance the resilience of livelihoods and production
systems to climate change and other shocks”. What are the challenges
responsible for the gloomy picture of food security situation in Africa today?
African
countries face many constraints militating against agricultural production,
processing, handling and marketing. Some of these constraints on agricultural
and rural development in Africa can be linked to misguided policies, weak
institutions and a lack of well-trained human resources. Other constraints
against agricultural productivity emanate from insecurity and political conflicts,
which sometimes resort into civil unrest. However, even under normal
circumstances, the agricultural productivity in Africa is low compared to other
regions. This brings the question of the need to have edge-cutting technology,
which can revolutionize agriculture at shortest possible time. Can that be
genetically modified technology (GMT)? Can GMT be a pathway for ending hunger
and achievement of food security in Africa?
Genetic
modified (GM) technology is a technique, which allows the transfer of selected genes
for specific traits between species using laboratory processes. GMT is a recent
breakthrough in biotechnology, a strategy, which combats debilitating and rare
diseases, reduce environmental footprint, feed the hungry, use less and cleaner
energy, and have safer, cleaner and more efficient industrial manufacturing
processes. The biotechnology existed many centuries ago and widened its scope
to include innovation in medicine; extending to its latest globally
controversial product: genetically modified organisms, GMOs, sometimes also
called transgenic organisms.
It is this latest status that brought
biotechnology to its contemporary limelight with attendant hype and
sensationalism, shot it to the global footing of a multilateral agenda.
Biotechnology was hitherto a non-issue or was just like any other technical
breakthroughs. The first stage of biotechnology is the crops or animals
breeding. Traditionally, the aim of breeding of plants and animals is to tailor
the plant or animal for a certain character or trait improvement. For example,
a new crop variety might be bred for drought tolerant or resistant to diseases.
The process of traditional breeding involves the use of germplasm from the pool
of the ancestors with desirable traits of interest and crossing them with each
other, to make the progenies output carry through heritability and have the favorable traits from both
parents. Since the progenies carry both half desired and undesired hereditary
traits from the parents, they will be passed on and it takes a number of
breeding cycles (backcrossing) to
eliminate the undesired traits and build on the desired traits.
This certainly
takes time. The final new plant variety or breed of animal after several years
of selection will have the desired traits. This is only applicable to heritable
traits, which were inherited from its ancestors along with the associated genes
for those traits.
NAERLS ED, Prof.M.K Othiman |
Thus, the traditional
breeding is a way of harnessing the genetic resources of an organism by
selective breeding. The advance level of the traditional breeding is the
genetic breeding, which is fast gaining popularity and acceptance globally.
What are the implications of adopting genetically modified seeds technology in
Africa? (to be continued next week)
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