[Ccpg] Africa's 'Green Revolution' on Shaky Ground "A new African aid project may be in danger of becoming yet another boon for Big Agra'
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Thu Jun 28 09:24:48 PDT 2007
hi everyone
With the International Permaculture
Conference and Convergence happening in Africa in
2009, it will be very important to support the
event by attending and also giving some financial support.
The Organizers of IPC9 The Regional Schools and
Colleges Permaculture (RESCOPE) Programme of
Malawi and the most famous and oldest
Permaculture Center in Africa Fambidzanai
Permaculture Center are planning a series of 4
permaculture Course over the next 2 years leading
up to IPC9 in 2007 to teach a PDC course to
representatives of every country in Africa , so
the IPC9 will truly be a Continental event for
Africa and the world. Theses PDC courses will
require support of the International Permaculture
Community to help finance part of the courses. If
you have any leads to help them for the moment
until the website is activated for IPC9 please contact
wes roe and margie bushman Facilitator for
the International Support Group of IPC9
Africa's 'Green Revolution' on Shaky Ground
A new African aid project may be in danger of
becoming yet another boon for Big Agra
By Natalie Hudson, Utne.com
http://www.utne.com/webwatch/2007_305/news/12640-1.html
June 28, 2007 Issue
Aiding unfamiliar communities in foreign
countries is a thorny business. Even for
foundations with virtually unlimited resources,
such as those of Microsoft multibillionaire Bill
Gates and the famously loaded Rockefellers. Last
fall these two titans of philanthropy joined in
undertaking a $150 million sub-Saharan Africa
project called Alliance for a Green Revolution in
Africa (AGRA). According to AGRA's website, the
new "Green Revolution" aims to assuage poverty
and hunger through agricultural development focusing on small-scale farmers.
Though the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has
received wide acclaim for its aid efforts, Becky
Brun of Sustainable Industries (subscription
only) reports that its new African venture has
critics raising pitchforks in alarm. Consider,
critics say, that the original,
Rockefeller-sponsored Green Revolution project in
the 1940s, 50s, and 60s introduced Latin America,
Southeast Asia, and India to industrial
agricultural practices that are heavily reliant
on fertilizers, genetically modified seeds, and
monocultures of a handful of globally marketable
crops, such as rice, corn, and wheat. Rural
farmers were unable to weather the high costs of
this technological farming and forced to give up
their farms and relocate to join the urban
workforce. Though AGRA's representatives claim
the "New Green Revolution" will be nothing like
the Rockefellers' original one, critics are
concerned that the same mistakes may be repeated,
in a place where they can least afford them:
sub-Saharan Africa. The area is, as Brun notes,
"the only region in the world where per-capita
food production worsens every year."
Bruce Dixon of Black Agenda Report is highly
skeptical of the motives of these large
philanthropic organizations and considers the
media support for the AGRA project an example of
"poor-washing" -- a "public relations tactic of
concealing bitterly unfair and predatory trade
policies... with clouds of hypocritical noise
about feeding the hungry and alleviating
poverty." Until AGRA's "shiny PR campaign" came
along, writes Dixon, Africa was able to fend off
Western efforts to cash in on the continent's
agriculture industry. The new campaign has made
inroads with the friendly faces of Bill Gates and
Kofi Annan, yet some organizations like the ETC
Group (the Action Group on Erosion, Technology,
and Concentration) consider it a risk that could
repeat the errors of the 20th century. In a press
release, ETC says the project, which it terms
"Green Revolution 2.0," will still be centered on
"high-tech seeds" and will seek "continental
changes in market structure, intellectual
property laws, and seed regulation so that
agribusiness suppliers can profitably sell seeds,
chemicals, and other inputs to farmers."
For their part, the foundations' representatives,
including Dr. Rajiv Shah, director of
agricultural development for the Gates
Foundation, proclaim their commitment to small
farmers and stress that "AGRA is led by
Africans," writes Brun. Many remain wary,
however, especially in light of AGRA's fall
hiring of former Monsanto executive Rob Horsch,
followed by the recruitment of Lawrence Kent, a
director of international programs at the
Monsanto-funded Danforth Center, as noted by the
Organic Consumers Association. And if the seventh
annual World Social Forum gathering in Nairobi,
Kenya, was any indication, the "New Green
Revolution" will face African opposition as well.
As Brun reports, 70 organizations from 12 African
countries attending the January event formally
criticized the aid initiatives of Gates and
others, claiming they will "destroy the basis of
biodiversity... at a time when it is needed most."
Go there >> Burly Gates
Go there, too >> Poor-Washing, the Gates
Foundation and the "Green Revolution" in Africa
And there >> Food Sovereignty or Green Revolution 2.0?
And there >> Monsanto's Men Control Gates Foundation's Millions
Related Links:
Genetic Patenting Means Corporate Profits, Not Progress
Food First Policy Brief No. 12
Related Links from the Utne Reader Archive:
White Man's Burden
An Economy of Fail
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