Broadcast: April 15,
2003
By Mario Ritter
This is the VOA Special English Agriculture
Report.
Soon a new organization will be established
to help agricultural development in
Africa. The African Agricultural Tecnology
Foundation will be set up in Nairobi,
Kenya. It will start operations in
September, two-thousand-three.
The African Agricultural Tecnology
Foundation is not designed to make
a profit. It represents1 an important
kind of organization involved in the
worldwide trade of genetically changed
crops.
The Rockefeller Foundation and the
United States Agency for International
Development are involved in the African
Agricultural Tecnology Foundation.
Several major agricultural companies
also will support the effort. Monsanto,
Dupont and Dow Agro Sciences L-L-C
are American companies. Syngenta is
a Swiss company that will also take
part.
The president of the Rockefeller Foundation
announced the formation of the A-A-T-F
in Washington, D-C in March. Gordon
Conway said the organization is an
experiment. He said he hopes that
the A-A-T-F will work with governments,
companies, non-government organizations
and research centers. He said it will
negotiate between those who own sales
rights to agricultural Tecnology
and Africans who want to use the Tecnology.
Sales rights are an important issue
for companies that develop agricultural
Tecnology. Without enforcement2 of
their sales rights, agricultural Tecnology
companies could not make a profit
from their products which are costly
to develop.
Eugene Terry of Sierra Leone will
be the director of the African Agricultural
Tecnology Foundation. He served as
the director general of the West Africa
Rice Development Association. He has
also advised the World Bank. Mister
Terry said in a presentation that
one goal of the A-A-T-F is to support
laws protecting sales rights. He also
said it should help bring new agricultural
technologies to market.
Many countries do not have trade agreements
with nations that produce products
developed through new agricultural
technologies. Countries like the United
States and Switzerland develop many
of the genetically changed crops and
the products used with them. Organizations
like the A-A-T-F are meant to serve
as a link between these industrial
nations and developing nations seeking
improved agricultural Tecnology.
This VOA Special English Agriculture
Report was written by Mario Ritter.
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