Africa needs collaboration, not harmonization to benefit from biotechnology transformation
Africa needs collaboration, not harmonization to benefit from biotechnology transformation


Those remarks were made in Nairobi, Kenya, by Dr Rufus Ebegba, a biosafety expert and former Director General of Nigeria’s National Biosafety Management Agency, during a panel discussion on mainstreaming biotechnology in Africa’s agriculture at the inaugural African Conference on Agricultural Technologies (ACAT).
Extensive collaboration and co-creation
“In the last decade, African countries have been struggling with strategies to implement a wholistic program that would harmonize the various country-specific laws into regional and continental-wide laws, but unfortunately, we have not made progress, and this has not only retarded progress but shown that it is not a path to take,” he said. “The establishment of nascent agencies and policies is possible through extensive collaboration and co-creation with multiple and diverse stakeholders, as has been the case in establishing the biosafety regime in Nigeria.”
He added that it was important for organizations such as the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF) to develop strategies capable of helping African countries that do not have biosafety laws to establish such laws that are friendly and constructive towards biotechnology deployment.
“Research on biotechnology in Africa shows glaring deficiencies”
Dr Titus Alicai, Director of Research and Postgraduate Studies at Uganda’s National Agricultural Research Organisation (NARO), said that research on biotechnology in Africa shows some glaring deficiencies in capacity across the continent. “Biotechnology training has spread impressively in some areas, including as part of revised curricula, degree programs, and regulator training on biosafety. When you train scientists and not engage them locally, they will migrate to countries where they can get better opportunities, hence the need to develop infrastructure for practice for the scientists on the continent,” Dr Alicai said.
Prof Abdullahi Mustapha, Director General of Nigeria’s National Biotechnology Development Agency, said that Africa lacked major foundational elements for the people to see biotechnology results like biotech infrastructure, manpower, and sufficient capacity. “If governments provide a platform by allowing industry to support research activities and put resources in it, research institutions can create better infrastructure and capacity to promote biotechnological products.”
Patience Koku, the chief executive of Replenish Farms, Nigeria, noted that farming remained challenging worldwide but more so in Africa because of the absence of technologies. “We should use already established channels, like the seed companies, as a pathway to ensure that biotechnology and its products get down to the smallholder farmers because the farmers will always want the right product,” Patience said.
Better regulation needed
Earlier, Vitumbiko Chinoko of the Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology (OFAB) at AATF said biotechnology has huge potential for the African continent. However, opportunities for better regulation needed to be provided to ensure the continent benefits correctly from the technology.
He said that AATF, through OFAB, was facilitating an enabling environment for optimal decision-making for agricultural biotech. “Conversations about agricultural biotechnology are influenced more by public opinion rather than science, and perception does not exactly give the true picture,” he said.
“Main actors in biotechnology are acting in silos, and that means shared visions and collaborated information is lacking. Communication, education, and knowledge sharing are important and should target getting the benefits to the farmer. We have shifted the narrative of communicating biotechnology from defending biotechnology to owning the narrative, a major shift in strategy.”
From development to product commercialization
Other necessary strategies, according to him, include providing a platform for stakeholders to showcase their contribution to advancing science and technological innovations in the agricultural sector is crucial, raising the visibility of issues of concern around innovative technology access and delivery among the continent’s top leadership including policymakers for their information and to guide decision-making; developing a roadmap to support the advancement of agricultural technologies from development to product commercialization; and promoting networking, collaboration, and shared learning on agricultural biotechnology.
Alex Abutu is a science journalist at the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), leading communication and advocacy strategies in West and Central Africa. Find Alex on X @lexyabutu
A version of this article was originally posted at the Alliance for Science and is reposted here with permission. Any reposting should credit both the GLP and original article. Find the Alliance for Science on X @ScienceAlly

![]() | Videos | More... |

Video: Nuclear energy will destroy us? Global warming is an existential threat? Chemicals are massacring bees? Donate to the Green Industrial Complex!
![]() | Bees & Pollinators | More... |

GLP podcast: Science journalism is a mess. Here’s how to fix it

Mosquito massacre: Can we safely tackle malaria with a CRISPR gene drive?

Are we facing an ‘Insect Apocalypse’ caused by ‘intensive, industrial’ farming and agricultural chemicals? The media say yes; Science says ‘no’
![]() | Infographics | More... |

Infographic: Global regulatory and health research agencies on whether glyphosate causes cancer
![]() | GMO FAQs | More... |

Why is there controversy over GMO foods but not GMO drugs?

How are GMOs labeled around the world?

How does genetic engineering differ from conventional breeding?
![]() | GLP Profiles | More... |

Alex Jones: Right-wing conspiracy theorist stokes fear of GMOs, pesticides to sell ‘health supplements’








Viewpoint — Fact checking MAHA mythmakers: How wellness influencers and RFK, Jr. undermine American science and health
Viewpoint: Video — Big Solar is gobbling up productive agricultural land and hurting farmers yet providing little energy or sustainabilty gains
Fighting deforestation with CO2: Biotechnology breakthrough creates sustainable palm oil alternative for cosmetics
Trust issues: What happens when therapists use ChatGPT?
30-year-old tomato line shows genetic resistance to devastating virus
California, Washington, Oregon forge immunization alliance to safeguard vaccine access against federal undermining
The free-range chicken dilemma: Better for birds, but with substantial costs
‘You have to treat the brain first’: Rethinking chronic pain with Sanjay Gupta