Gates Foundation "swimming against a tide of informed opinion" regarding GMOs
-
-
- JanforGore
- added this
As the world population reaches 7 billion GM Freeze says in a new report published today [1] that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s policy on agricultural development to tackle hunger is "swimming against a tide of informed opinion".
The report reveals the Gates Foundation has allocated over 40% of its committed research expenditure from 2005 to 2011 on projects involving risky “silver bullet” GM technology.
The collaboration between the Gates Foundation and DFID, announced in February 2011, includes a commitment to carry out GM research into altering the photosynthesis of rice to make it more tolerant of drought. [2] This theoretical switching of rice metabolism has been described as "high risk" by many, including the Royal Society, because of the complex changes required to make it work and the high chance of failure. [3]
In contrast GM Freeze reveals that the Gates Foundation has only allocated some US$20 million (4% of the total budget of US$521 million) to all soil research despite acknowledging the poor state of some African soils. However the Gates Foundation has pledged nearly US$214 million to research involving GM techniques from 2005 to the present – ten times the budget for soil research.
The group's report says the Gates Foundation and DFID are ignoring the recommendations of key research, including the unprecedented IAASTD report in 2008, endorsed by the UK Government, which recommended agroecological approaches to farming to restore natural resources, such as the soils, biodiversity and water and a switch away from fossil-fuel based artificial fertilisers and pesticides. [4]
GM Freeze also reveals the Gates Foundation funding of the Alliance for a Green Revolution for Africa (AGRA) to distribute artificial fertilisers to small farmers. AGRA plan to deliver 187,000 tons of fertilizer "to small farmers through wholesale and retail networks by December 2012" at a overall cost of US$164 million to the Gates Foundation – eight times their allocated expenditure on soil research.
The Gates Foundation collaborate closely with agri-biotechnology companies including Monsanto, BASF, Du Pont, Dow and the Syngenta Foundation in projects to develop GM seeds and promote fertilisers, pesticides and hybrid seeds to small African farmers through bodies such as African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF) and projects like Harvest Plus – both also funded by DFID.
Pete Riley of GM Freeze said:
"The Gates Foundation approach to agricultural development is swimming against of tide of informed opinion if it is serious about tackling hunger.
"Instead of promoting proven, low-cost solutions, the Foundation is mimicking discredited high input farming that has cost millions in Northern countries due to pollution, soil erosion and disastrous impacts on biodiversity above and below the soil. DFID is meekly following this lead despite expert analysis showing that in a world with eroded natural resources, climate change and rising demand and costs of energy and fertilisers, a switch to agroecological approaches is urgently needed.
"Offering small and family farmers GM technology will only lock them into expensive and failing intensive farming approaches that benefit big business.
More at the link
-
- groups:
- Tech, Green, Culture, Earth and Science, 8 more
-
- tags:
- Environment, Climate Change, Pollution, Poverty, 22 more
-
-
queenofit
-
As stated above, the work Gates and his cronies are doing is not to "save the starving people of our planet". Here is a little snippet from William F Engdhal's article written in November 2010, which is well sourced I might add...
"Gates’ TED2010 speech on zero emissions and population reduction is consistent with a report that appeared in New York City’s ethnic media, Irish.Central.com in May 2009. According to the report, a secret meeting took place on May 5, 2009 at the home of Sir Paul Nurse, President of Rockefeller University, among some of the wealthiest people in America. Investment guru Warren Buffett who in 2006 decided to pool his $30 billion Buffett Foundation into the Gates foundation to create the world’s largest private foundation with some $60 billions of tax-free dollars was present. Banker David Rockefeller was the host.
The exclusive letter of invitation was signed by Gates, Rockefeller and Buffett. They decided to call themselves the “Good Club.” Also present was media czar Ted Turner, billionaire founder of CNN who stated in a 1996 interview for the Audubon nature magazine, where he said that a 95% reduction of world population to between 225-300 million would be “ideal.” In a 2008 interview at Philadelphia’s Temple University, Turner fine-tuned the number to 2 billion, a cut of more than 70% from today’s population. Even less elegantly than Gates, Turner stated, “we have too many people. That’s why we have global warming. We need less people using less stuff (sic).”16
Others attending this first meeting of the Good Club reportedly were: Eli Broad real estate billionaire, New York’s billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Wall Street billionaire and Council on Foreign Relations former head, Peter G. Peterson." hmmm? The Good Club? how apropos (not). So far these 1%er's are just managing to contribute money to help lower the population, and to think we here in USA are being used as the GMO project to top all others.http://globalpoliticalawakening.blogspot.com/2010/11/bill-gates-and-neo-eugenics...
- 1 year ago
-
queenofit
-
-
letsliveinpeace
-
Thanks for posting this article.
- 1 year ago
-
letsliveinpeace
-
-
Debra_
-
I applaud the work of Bill and Melinda Gates and their foundation.
The world faces a desperate situation. These poor people need food but the conditions they live in are too unsuitable to grow regular crops. That's where science comes in with the solution. Genetically engineered corps can survive even some of the most arid landscapes.
It works out well for everyone. They accept the improved seeds and fertilizer, they get fed. I don't see how anyone could argue with that.
- 1 year ago
-
Debra_
-
-
JanforGore
-
Debra_:
Natural traits in plants fight drought and are the ones being stolen from indigenous communities by companies like Monsanto for profit which is why they are being sued for biopiracy in India right now. GMOs have actually decreased cotton yields in India where agroecology has been proven to produce better yields. And please don't come here feigning that you give a damn about people in these areas based on your previous comments regarding sterilizing people. GMOS have done nothing to feed people (paying attention to Somalia and the fact that a billion people still starve while WE grow fatter?) but plenty to make Monsanto and Bill Gates and their minions richer by using land for biofuel and animal feed which actually takes land away from growing food and exacerbating climate change and poisoning people. Your red herring is just that.
- 1 year ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
nikonwilly
-
Debra_:
Do some actual research and you will find that real science finds plenty WRONG with this!
Do you have any idea what's been going on with the farmers across this Country dealing with Monsanto lawsuits ?
If left unchecked..Monsanto and other mega- pesticide/agricultural corporations will own every seed on this planet....literally! - 1 year ago
-
nikonwilly
-
-
MotherForTruth
-
Debra_:
Debra, please read up on Monsanto and GMO before you comment on "those poor people".
- 1 year ago
-
MotherForTruth
-
-
JanforGore
-
Seems like some invest in both the disease and the cure to play both ends to profit from both ends... and are hailed as "altruistic." Perpetuating a possible worldwide famine in a monoculture world with a rising population by investing in a risky pseudo technology is not doing much to feed people, let alone pull them out of poverty.
- 1 year ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
MotherForTruth
-
Thank you Jan. Great info.
- 1 year ago
-
MotherForTruth
-
-
JanforGore
-
MotherForTruth:
You're welcome.
- 1 year ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
JanforGore
-
Why is this post still marked as spam and hidden? There is nothing remotely related to spam in this post.
- 1 year ago
-
JanforGore
