Audio By Carbonatix
The University of Ghana will on Friday host an International Forum on Agricultural Transformation to deliberate on what agricultural sector stakeholders need to do differently to ensure enhanced food security on the African continent.
The International Symposium on Agricultural Transformation and Biotech Crops in Africa will discuss how crops produced using biotechnology tools like genetically modified organism (GMO) technology and gene editing technology can be appropriately deployed on the African continent for the benefit of farmers.
It is being organised by the West Africa Centre for Crop Improvement (WACCI) at the University of Ghana, Alliance for Science Ghana, and Alliance for Science.
The symposium forms part of activities to mark the 16th-anniversary celebration and alumni homecoming of WACCI.
The symposium will discuss the future of biotech crops in Africa from the perspectives of scientists developing improved crops using new breeding techniques, government officials managing the agricultural sector, regulators, policy experts, as well as social and economic analysts.
The challenges that have inhibited the rapid adoption of biotechnologies in Africa, including the myths surrounding them, will be dissected.
Additionally, the likely social, cultural, political, and economic implications that will result if more African countries adopt these new breeding techniques will be discussed.
Renowned scientists including Prof. Eric Danquah who is the founding director of WACCI, Dr Sheila Ochugboju who is the director of Alliance for Science - Boyce Thompson Institute - USA; Dr Leena Tripathi who is Eastern Africa Director of International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), and Prof. Giles Oldroyd who is director of the Cambridge Crop Science Centre - University of Cambridge – UK, will be speaking at the symposium.
Deputy Minister, Ministry of Food & Agriculture Yaw Frimpong Addo will also speak at the symposium.
Scientists will shed light on the latest promising new breeding techniques and other scientific innovations in crop improvement.
Social scientists will also share perspectives on the role of interdisciplinary scholarly research in helping create the appropriate environment for the deployment of GMOs & genome-edited crops in Africa.
Industry players, donor partners, and government officials will share ideas on how self-sustaining public-private partnerships can be created to enhance the adoption of biotech crops on the African continent.
The need for African governments to commit more resources to research activities on new breeding techniques as viable investments that can help ensure a healthy and food-secured Africa will also be discussed.
At the end of the symposium, a communique on ‘Pathways To Making Africa Food Sufficient’ will be issued.
The document will make recommendations on the changes that African governments, state agencies, donor partners, universities, research institutions, industry, farmers, consumers, and other agricultural sector stakeholders, should institute to help enhance access to ‘made in Africa biotech crops.’
The symposium will generate a holistic body of knowledge that policymakers, policy implementers, and development partners can tap into for ideas on how to make the African continent food secure using new breeding techniques.
Latest Stories
-
Endangered antelopes flown to Kenya from Czech zoo in ‘historic homecoming’
6 minutes -
Five takeaways from the King’s historic address to Congress
10 minutes -
Let’s join ‘National Streetism Awareness’ to raise awareness about plight of street children – Salome Atiglah
10 minutes -
Prada launches Indian-made sandals after cultural appropriation backlash
11 minutes -
Outrage after Indian man carries his sister’s skeleton to a bank to prove her death
13 minutes -
GOIL launches 2026 HSSEQ Week with Focus on Psychosocial Well-being
24 minutes -
NPRA’s digital revolution: How technology is reshaping Ghana’s pension sector
32 minutes -
CID clears Sesi-Edem, Council of State member in $14.3m gold deal probe
33 minutes -
Credit to corporate institutions tighten in first two months of 2026
44 minutes -
Two dead after small plane crashes into Australia airport hangar
45 minutes -
Banks wrote-off GH¢394.8m as bad debt in February 2026
49 minutes -
‘Dumsor running in shifts, not 24-hour economy’ — NPP’s Dr Ekua Amoakoh slams gov’t over power outages
53 minutes -
AIPS Awards 2025: JoySports’ Mubarak Haruna takes second and fifth spots in continental ranking
54 minutes -
Green finance: Legal foundations, global realities, and Ghana’s regulatory pathway
56 minutes -
Gov’t clears $29m Suame road debt, boosts project with GH₵3bn funding
58 minutes