1.Harnessing the Potential of Public/Private
Partnerships
2.Who are the African Agricultural Technology Foundation - a GM Watch profile
2.Who are the African Agricultural Technology Foundation - a GM Watch profile
EXTRACT: The selection of a permanent Board
of Directors for AATF was made with the assistance of its Design Advisory
Committee (DAC) which was created to play 'a critical advisory role, guiding
the formation of AATF' and to provide 'guidance on key operational issues'.
This included 'guidance on the business plan, selection of board members,
selection of the African headquarters, and the development of criteria for the
selection of pilot projects.'
The Committee included the former
Monsanto-trained scientist and lobbyist Florence Wambugu, who then headed
ISAAA's AfriCenter, as well as a number of biotech industry employees,
including Monsanto's Gerard Barry. Barry is quoted as saying that getting
involved with AATF 'has been fantastic for us [ie Monsanto].' (item 2)
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1.Food Security and Ag-Biotech News
for: 11/15/2006
http://www.merid.org/fs-agbiotech/
for: 11/15/2006
http://www.merid.org/fs-agbiotech/
Harnessing the Potential of Public/Private
Partnerships Source:AATF
This 2005 annual report from the African
Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), based in Kenya, says that AATF's
work demonstrates the viability and importance of fostering partnerships
between technology donors, public research institutes, seed companies, NGOs,
and government extension agents.
The report discusses how Monsanto has
provided a royalty-free, non-exclusive license to AATF to use Monsanto's cry1Ab
Bt gene for the development of insect resistant cowpea varieties.
AATF has sub-licensed the technology to
Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization
(CSIRO) and the Nigeria-based International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
(IITA), which are collaborating to produce Bt cowpea varieties well-suited to
farming systems in sub-Saharan Africa.
Other licensing agreements for rights to a
broad range of technologies, including gene technologies, biological control
technologies, and mechanical implements, are being negotiated with a number of
public and private institutions.
AATF was also active in 2005 with facilitating
the introduction of "Strigaway" maize seed technology to about 5,000
western Kenyan farmers whose crops were severely affected by Striga, a
parasitic weed.
The foundation coordinated with
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and government extension services to
disseminate, and private seed companies have now become involved in selling it.
The 40-page report is available online at the
link below.
http://www.aatf-africa.org/publications/aatf-ar2005.pdf
http://www.aatf-africa.org/publications/aatf-ar2005.pdf
---
2.African Agricultural Technology Foundation
(AATF)
GM Watch profile
http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=163
GM Watch profile
http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=163
[for all the links]
The Nairobi-based African Agricultural
Technology Foundation (AATF) was formed in July 2002 under the direction of
Eugene Terry, its Implementing Director. In April 2004 Mpoko Bokanga was
appointed AATF's first Executive Director with Eugene Terry, who was previously
an agricultural Advisor with the World Bank in Washington DC, continuing as
Implementing Director.
According to its website (in 2003), 'The AATF
is a new and unique public-private partnership designed to remove many of the
barriers that have prevented smallholder farmers in Africa from gaining access
to existing agricultural technologies that could help relieve food insecurity
and alleviate poverty.'
The rice industry website Oryza.com explained
the purpose of AATF in straightforward terms, 'The goal of the AATF will be to
work with governments, companies, non-governmental organizations, and research
centers to negotiate the sales rights of genetically modified crops and bring
new agricultural technologies to the African market.'
And unlike AATF's website which only lists as
donors USAID, the Rockefeller Foundation and the United Kingdom's Department
for International Development , Oryza.com also lists the following
biotechnology corporations: Monsanto, Dupont, Dow Agro Sciences and
Syngenta.(Africa: Group to Promote GMO Sales, Oryza.com )
In some ways AATF appears to be modelled on
the longer-standing International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech
Applications, which although originating in the US, has an office in Nairobi.
Both ISAAA and AATF also have very similar backers and both work on GM
'technology transfer' to Africa, but AATF has been given a more African facade.
Its website states, 'The AATF will be based in Africa and will be led, managed
and directed by Africans.'
AATF's board is chaired by Jennifer Thompson,
a scientist and fervent GM supporter who came to prominence as part of South
Africa's regulatory body SAGENE, originally established under South Africa's
apartheid regime. Interestingly, Thompson is also on the board of ISAAA as well
as the biotech-industry backed South African lobby group AfricaBio.
The selection of a permanent Board of
Directors for AATF was made with the assistance of its Design Advisory
Committee (DAC) which was created to play 'a critical advisory role, guiding
the formation of AATF' and to provide 'guidance on key operational issues'.
This included 'guidance on the business plan, selection of board members,
selection of the African headquarters, and the development of criteria for the
selection of pilot projects.' The Committee included the former
Monsanto-trained scientist and lobbyist Florence Wambugu, who then headed
ISAAA's AfriCenter, as well as a number of biotech industry employees,
including Monsanto's Gerard Barry. Barry is quoted as saying that getting
involved with AATF 'has been fantastic for us [ie Monsanto].'
In June 2004 Mpoko Bokanga of AATF and J.B.
Penn, U.S. under secretary of agriculture for farm and foreign agricultural
services, signed a memorandum of understanding on behalf of the U.S. and AATF
in which they agreed to work together to 'share and disseminate agricultural
technologies that can help improve food production, increase food security,
reduce poverty and expand agricultural trade', according to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA). The signing took place at an ceremony in Ouagadougou,
Burkina Faso, on the first day of a three-day ministerial conference on
agricultural biotechnology sponsored by the USDA, the U.S. Department of State,
and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). (US Department of
State PRESS RELEASE, June 21, 2004)
AATF's Executive Director Mpoko Bokanga told
the launch audience that the organisation is working with the Kenya
Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) and the Syngenta Foundation to introduce
a variety of GM maize resistant to the stem borer. According to a report by
Aaron deGrassi of the Institute of Development Studies, the Syngenta
Foundation's activities, such as the GM maize project being trialled by KARI,
have more to do with PR than with delivering real benefits to poor farmers.
Other AATF projects are said to include a
vitamin A maize and an initiative to increase cowpea productivity in
sub-Saharan Africa. Aaron deGrassi's over all conclusion on GM projects is that
'while genetic modification may constitute a novel tool, in Africa it is a
relatively ineffective and expensive one Cash-strapped scientists working with
poor farmers in Africa might well regard genetic modification as a waste of
time and money.'
Original Article Here
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