Biotechnology is motor for Africa's food security

In Addis Ababa on March 10, 2018 (Fana), Dr. Kanisius Kanagire, executive director of the African Agricultural Technology Foundation, stated that biotechnology is a key motor for Africa's food security and sovereignty. In an interview with Fana Digital, he emphasized the need to make it practical in the field to boost productivity.

Dr. Kanisius Kanagire, executive director of the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), stated in an interview with Fana Digital in Addis Ababa that biotechnology serves as a primary motor for achieving food security and sovereignty in Africa. He stressed the importance of implementing it practically in the field to enhance crop yields and productivity. To counter climate change, drought, pests, and low productivity, he noted that field successes are already evident. In Ethiopia, biotech research on maize and wheat at the Bio and Nano Engineering Technology Institute has yielded high results, including numerous demonstrative varieties, according to Kanagire. While new agricultural technologies hold great potential to transform African farming, they require integrated extension services to bridge information gaps among farmers. The foundation is working to foster trust in the technology among Africans. Kanagire advocated positioning agriculture as an engine for socioeconomic transformation by funding our own changes with our own resources. Relying solely on external aid cannot sustainably strengthen food systems, as many current initiatives are beggar-driven and externally funded. Research institutions should adapt biotechnology to African contexts to address local agricultural challenges.

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Quality seeds resilient to climate change are the main pillar in preventing hunger and ensuring food security across Africa. According to Dr. Yacouba Diallo, Secretary General of the African Seed Trade Association (AFSTA), agricultural reforms cannot succeed without robust seed systems. AFSTA will host its 2026 congress in South Africa to discuss these issues.

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Ethiopia's Agriculture Minister Adisu Arega stated that the agricultural sector is playing a key role in efforts to build a job-creating non-subsistence economy. He visited wheat production sites in Oromia region's East Shewa zone, Adaa woreda. The agricultural transformation is registering encouraging results.

In Addis Ababa on Miyaziya 20, 2018 (EFEM SI), Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed stated at a social service event that livestock farming represents a chapter of distress in Ethiopia's journey toward food self-sufficiency. He emphasized that proper use of water resources, untapped potential, and ingenuity offer hope for sustainable food security.

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Ethiopia earned 408.2 million dollars by exporting 236,415 tons of horticulture products over the past 10 months. Agriculture Minister Adisu Arega announced the revenue during a visit to production sites.

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