Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

GMW: Gates gives more money to GM projects (use linux)

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

GMW: Gates gives more money to GM projects

" GM WATCH " <info

Tue, 28 Jun 2005 09:39:30 +0100

 

 

 

 

GM WATCH daily

http://www.gmwatch.org

------

1.Gates gives more money to GM projects

2.Gates gets Wambugu-ed!

 

The GM projects here should come as no surprise given the leading role

played in the the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's Grand Challenges

in Global Health by the Monsanto-trained scientist/lobbyist Florence

Wambugu - see item 2 below and her PANTS ON FIRE AWARD

http://www.gmwatch.org/p2temp2.asp?aid=59 & page=1 & op=2

 

excerpt from item 1: Four grants totaling $47 million are being given

to researchers working to fight malnutrition by genetically altering the

nutritional content of bananas, cassava, rice and sorghum. For example,

bananas with greater content of vitamins A and

E and iron...

------

1.Global research gets a big boost

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/nation/12000303.htm

 

Gates Foundation gives $436.6 million for health projects

 

SEATTLE - Two years ago, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation posed a

series of questions to scientists around the world:

 

How can we improve public health in developing countries? Can we

develop vaccines that don't require refrigeration or needles? Are there

better ways to stop insects from spreading malaria and other diseases?

 

The scientists answered by proposing more than 1,500 research projects.

The Gates Foundation announced Monday that it would finance 43 of the

proposals with grants totaling $436.6 million. That will pay for

research ranging from finding AIDS vaccines to boosting the nutritional

content of bananas.

 

" It's shocking how little research is directed toward the diseases of

the world's poorest countries, " Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates said

in a news release. " By harnessing the world's capacity for scientific

innovation, I believe we can transform health in the developing world

and save millions of lives "

 

Among the projects:

 

- A team led by Abraham Sonenshein of the Tufts University School of

Medicine in Boston will get $5 million to create childhood vaccines that

don't require refrigeration. Sonenshein's plan is to encapsulate the

vaccines in harmless - but naturally heat-resistant - bacterial spores.

The vaccines could be distributed in packets for people to mix with

water and drink.

 

- An international team led by Scott Leslie O'Neill of the University

of Queensland in Australia will get $6.7 million to introduce a

bacterial parasite to a mosquito population in a laboratory.

 

The parasite, which occurs naturally in other insects, should cause the

mosquitoes to die before they are old enough to transmit dengue fever.

 

- Four grants totaling $47 million are being given to researchers

fighting malnutrition by genetically altering the nutritional content of

bananas, cassava, rice and sorghum.

 

For example, bananas with more vitamins A and E and iron could improve

health in Uganda, where 38 percent of children under 5 are stunted from

malnourishment.

------

2.Gates gets Wambugu-ed! - GMWatch, October 2003

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=1625

 

Last year Dr. Florence Wambugu was appointed to the Science Board of

the Bill & Melissa Gates Foundation's Grand Challenges in Global Health

initiative.

 

Dr Wambugu is a DuPont Biotech Advisory Panelist, a two-times Monsanto

Company Outstanding Performance Award winner, author and publisher of

the book " Modifying Africa " and Chief Executive Director of A Harvest

Biotech Foundation International. Dr Wambugu has also been called " an

apostle of Monsanto in Africa " . She was picked and trained by Monsanto

and

came to fame via Monsanto's virus-resistant sweet potato project.

 

Wambugu built her reputation on this project, capturing massive

positive publicity for GM in the process. But Wambugu's reputation is

built on

a lie. The project in question has been very far from the success that

is repeatedly claimed.

 

As Aaron deGrassi, a researcher at the Institute of Development Studies

at Sussex University, reveals in his analysis of the project, claims of

big improvements in yield appear to be based on massively understating

the yield of the conventional sweet potato crop in Kenya. And the

project has been completely outclassed by conventional breeding and

better

ecological management which have produced far greater improvements in

yields at a fraction of the cost of the Wambugu project.

 

" The sweet potato project is now nearing its twelfth year, and involves

over 19 scientists ... and an estimated $6 million. In contrast,

conventional sweet potato breeding in Uganda was able in just a few

years to

develop with a small budget a well-liked virus-resistant variety with

yield gains of nearly 100%. " The best improvement the GM sweet potato

can produce - and there is some doubt as to whether the project has even

achieved this - is 18%. The reason for doubt? " At the farm level, there

is currently no evidence about the performance of transgenic sweet

potatoes. The most recent account, published in January of this year,

makes

no mention of the state of the trials. KARI researchers have refused to

state how the trials, now in their third year, have performed. "

 

But while the reality of Wambugu's work appears to have been a waste of

resources, it has been a colossal triumph in PR terms. Do a google

search on " sweet potato + wambugu " and you'll find around 500 different

items, many major articles reporting Wambugu's " life-saving " work from

the

world's media. In them Wambugu preaches the Monsanto gospel that GM

crops are the key to eradicating poverty and hunger in the Third World.

Her statements are largely met with the very opposite of critical

scrutiny, as journalist Rankin McKay has noted,

 

" is it too cynical to suggest that having a black African as the face

of a multinational chemical company is a spin doctor's dream? This seems

to have lobotomised some journalists who have treated her views like

the tablets from the Mount. Even the normally rigorous Jon Faine

interviewed her in a way that was almost fawning. " (GM science can be

blinding)

 

In the Dec. 5, 2001 issue of Forbes magazine, Wambugu was named as one

of 15 people from around the world who will " reinvent the future. "

 

As deGrassi notes, the tragedy is that this kind of " excitement over

certain genetic engineering procedures can divert financial, human, and

intellectual resources from focusing on productive research that meets

the needs of poor farmers. "

 

[since this commentary was written, the results of the 3 years of

trials on the GM sweet potato were completed. the GM crop had been a

complete failure]

 

Aaron diGrassi, June 2003. Genetically Modified Crops and Sustainable

Poverty Alleviation in Sub-Saharan Africa. Third World Network, Africa.

http://www.twnafrica.org/docs/GMCropsAfrica.pdf

 

 

 

------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...