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Free New Zealand in Food & Environment, 29th
March 2006
Biotech The Answer To Africa's Hunger?
Carey Gillam
As he pores over plant tissue and petri dishes in a biotech
seed lab in Johnston, Iowa, Luke Mehlo is half a world away
from his home in South Africa.
But though
the corn fields of Iowa bear little resemblance to the arid
plains of Africa, the research center where Mehlo toils has
become home to a unique joint venture that is merging African
agricultural interests with US money and technology.
The goal
is to turn sorghum - a common US row crop used in animal feed,
cereals and industrial products - into a plant that can not
only weather devastating drought but also yield a rich blend
of vitamins and minerals. Researchers believe such a combination
could help combat the hunger and malnutrition ravaging parts
of Africa.
"A
lot of people have died on the African continent, quite unnecessarily,"
said Mehlo, a molecular biotechnologist who came to Iowa from
South Africa in October. "We seek to have a crop that will
enable us to survive during
disasters and food shortages."
Tweaking
Genes
Mehlo is
one of a team of African scientists who will be working in Iowa
over the next three years, tinkering with the genes of sorghum
seeds. An estimated 300 million people in arid regions of Africa
rely on sorghum as a food source along with other crops. But
while conventional sorghum is already known to do well in drought
conditions, it lacks certain key
nutrients.
By taking
genes from other crops as well as manipulating genes within
the sorghum plant itself, scientists believe they can remake
sorghum into a more easily digestible crop richer in vitamins
A and E, iron, zinc and amino acids and protein.
Pioneer
Hybrid International, a subsidiary of Dupont, is a key US partner
and the sole commercial player in the endeavor. Pioneer has
donated US$4.8 million in gene technology, and is lending manpower
and facilities for visiting African scientists at its Johnston
headquarters.
"Africa
is a place where biotechnology is necessary," said Dean
Oestreich, President of Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc. "It
would be a big step to take and make a food crop more nutritious
for people in Africa."
The patented
technology donated by Pioneer has already shown feasibility
in corn seeds, making successful genetic changes in sorghum
likely as well, according to Paul Anderson, a Pioneer grain
manager and a member of the oversight committee for the "African
Biofortified Sorghum" project.
Still, it
is expected to take eight years and a second round of funding
before a specialized seed is ready for market.
Pioneer
will have no rights to revenues from the biotech sorghum once
it is developed and commercialized, said Anderson. But the company,
already locked into tight competition in the commercial seeds
market, hopes that success with biotech sorghum might help open
doors for other biotech crops in countries currently skeptical
of genetically altered crops.
Gates Gives
Money
Chief funding
for the project comes from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
in partnership with the National Institutes of Health. The foundation
last summer awarded a US$16.9 million grant for the project,
making it the largest of four grants handed out by the foundation
for the improvement of food through technology.
"Sorghum
is a huge staple throughout the world, particularly in Africa
where people suffer from some of the worst conditions,"
said Carol Dahl, director of the foundation's global health
technologies group.
Indeed,
millions of people in Africa are currently suffering starvation
and malnutrition as extended drought and baking heat strip them
of food and water.
Along with
the sorghum project, the Gates group is funding projects aimed
at creating more nutritious bananas, cassava and rice as part
of a total of $450 million in grants for improved nutrition,
disease prevention and treatment, Dahl said.
Biotech
sorghum and other crops are not expected to eradicate the devastation
caused by drought, but they could partly ease the pain, researchers
believe.
"We
have to wait... until we have a complete story," said Mehlo.
"But we are already ahead of schedule and we have materials
that are very very promising. There is so much light at the
end of the tunnel."
Jon Muller
Dip. Hort., NDH (Hons)
email: info@wellingtongardens.co.nz
Ph/Fax + 64 4 5890536
Mobile 0274 794 195
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