Kenyan farmers reject technology solutions

Farmers are saying traditional crops were much better because they rarely ever lost everything even in the worst of droughts.

Well, well, well. That’s from a news piece in The Nation, explaining that many farmers are turning away from improved varieties of maize and beans because they don’t deliver a reliable harvest. Kenya does put a little money into its “orphan crops programme,” designed to rehabilitate traditional crops such as cassava, sorghum and millet; The Nation stops just short of calling for more research into these crops.

And that, in a microcosm, is the entire story of international investment in agricultural R&D. Not enough, on the wrong things, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Philip Pardey and his colleagues Julian Alston and Jennifer James have published a paper on Agricultural R&D Policy: A Tragedy of the International Commons that makes for pretty grim reading. They analyse the extent of the current failure to invest and the reasons for it, useful ammunition for anyone who needs to know these things. And they offer some possibilities for the future, which personally I found less than convincing.

The Nation noted that scientists need to move speedily, to prevent the current food crisis one day being remembered as a picnic. But not all scientists are the problem. They chase money, and they solve the problems the money asks them to solve. The money needs to sit up and pay attention.

Through the genebank looking glass

As a contribution to the ongoing discussion of genebank database hell, we’re pleased to provide a platform for Michael Mackay, the person responsible for the bioinformatics projects at Bioversity International. At least until he gets a platform of his own …

Many thanks to Dirk van Enneking (and others) for providing some constructive input into suggesting what sort of information and functionality users of plant genetic resources (PGR) might actually want to see to help them locate and select accessions for their research and plant improvement activities. My understanding of the situation is comparable to Dirk’s.

  • Is it a telling sign that there is only one response to my request for a profile of what germplasm users want from an information system in about four months?
  • Is it such a boring and useless endeavor (to provide an online PGR information system) that it does not really matter what information and functionality is provided?
  • Perhaps we have been socially engineered to accept mediocrity and now we are prepared to accept token systems?

In starting work on Global-ALIS (ALIS = Accession Level Information System), one component of the Global Information on Germplasm Accessions (GIGA) project that will build a single internet doorway to more comprehensive information on over 2 million accessions held in genebanks around the world, we are finding a lot of information to support Luigi’s original post Lost in genebank database hell and subsequent points raised in response — including Dirk’s contribution.

One thing we learn is that a lot of data has been accumulated but it is not all made available, possibly for reasons other than intellectual property issues. For example, several people involved in genebank PGR documentation have said that if no one uses the online systems (because they are not useful for the purpose of finding and selecting germplasm for research and plant improvement) then what is the sense in continually updating the data?

Another issue is the availability of characterization and evaluation data. At the moment it seems that only the GRIN system makes significant progress on this count.

A third issue is adding value to existing data. Luigi mentioned geo-referencing and implied spatial analysis as useful ways to better understand distribution and, perhaps, add value to existing data in term of quality and usefulness.

I am pleased to say that we are addressing these issues, and more, in the development of Global-ALIS. However, the eventual utility of this system (due to be deployed in early 2011) could reflect the input and suggestions of those who want to explore and utilize all that genetic variability buried deeply in the world’s genebanks.

We are about to build a Global-ALIS website where people will be able to make suggestions and comments on what genebank database heaven might be like, what features it would have and how people might use it. Dirk’s and everyone else’s positive comments are great stuff! We will certainly take these suggestions on board. The only caveat I need to make is that we cannot do everything at once, so please be prepared to prioritize your suggestions to help us address the issues that will have the most impact in the first instance.

Adding a link

While we’re not willing to review or link to entirely unrelated sites, we are willing to share a bit of Google-juice, for example with Gary Robertson, who asked us nicely to link to The Green Providers Directory. Not a lot there on seeds, but take that as an opportunity.

Where do we sign, Mr Lucifer?

We got a very polite email from a robot recently, asking us to write an unbiased review of a website in exchange for money, or a free sample of the goods the site was flogging. We took a look, but we couldn’t see any possible link to agricultural biodiversity, so we turned down the nice robot’s offer. But it set us thinking. If we’re that popular, should we put a discreet advert above (or below) our most recent post? Should we have a Tip Jar so all you happening types with PayPal accounts can micro-reward us? Maybe an Amazon wish list? Recalling, however, that we live to serve you, our readers, we thought we’d ask you directly. So there’s a new poll, over there on the right. Vote early, and vote often. You have (about) a week. You can also comment on this post if you feel the poll options are unduly constraining.

Scientific rabble drowns out debate on GM crops

London’s Science Museum, with support from the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), has staged an exhibit to debate GM crops. Last night saw the actual debate. Our man in the hazchem suit reports:

“Future foods: join the GM debate.” The cry rang out from London’s Science Museum as it worked hard to assemble a public meeting (on 22 January 2009) to debate the issues raised in its temporary exhibition of the same name.

Despite fears from some observers that this debate and the accompanying exhibition were to be used to grace GM technology with phony public endorsement, in reality it all turned out rather different. Whether you were pro, anti or agnostic on the issue of GM farming and food, there was little appetite from the panel of speakers, let alone from most contributors from the floor, for the wholesale adoption of GM crops.

Defra (the UK’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) chief scientific adviser Bob Watson stole the show with his blunt analysis of the real food and nutrition problems facing the world. The goal, he said, has to be how to feed 900 million hungry people in the developing world.

This is not a challenge for technology to solve alone; we need a pro-poor trade regime, we need real rural development; we must put farmers at the centre of the debate and pay them for global public goods as well as food production, said Bob Watson. ((This sounds faintly like a call to allow agrobiodiversity to do more than simply supply genes, but I could be biassed. Ed.))

“We may need GM in the future, but at present it is an oversold technique, which needs examination on a case by case basis,” he concluded.

Professor Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy at City University, was equally lukewarm about the prospects for GM crops to solve what he termed the new fundamentals of farming and food production. Any solution has to operate under and — even better — help to solve the global pressures on energy supply, soil quality, water availability, the carbon cycle. To Professor Lang the key GM policy and political issue is ownership of the technology and its control.

As the debate opened up to comment and questions from the floor it soon became apparent that the organisers — who had feared hectoring, unruly behaviour from an anti-GM “rabble” — were in fact faced with irate researchers from such bodies as the John Innes Institute. Their degree of upset that society might wish to have a say on the direction that science is leading them was illuminating.

One such contributor asked why all the speakers were treating GM as a “generic science” with generic risk when each application was different and, in any case, merely mimicked “natural” processes. (All the speakers had carefully talked of “case by case” analysis.)

Bob Watson’s reasoned answer was lost in a cacophony of interruption from other researchers, forcing him to describe their approach as rude and uncivilised. An early retreat to drinks and an interval in debate was hurriedly called before the honour of the scientific establishment could be tarnished further.

Perhaps they do debate differently in Norwich?