DECLARATION OF GOIANIA
Adopted by the participants to the IV Latin American Meeting
on Plant Biotechnology during the closing ceremony
on 8th June 2001, Goiania, Brazil.
"Towards a biotechnology at the service of sustainable
development of the Latin America and the Caribbean
forestry and agricultural sectors"
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Introduction
In Latin America and the Caribbean,
in spite of the abundance of natural resources,
continuous investments in agricultural development
and a long run effort on agricultural research,
rural poverty and food insecurity affect more
than 55% of the rural population. In
these countries, the productive capacity of
agricultural lands will be saturated in the
short term thus increasing the risk of genetic,
water and soil resources degradation,and
the depredation of forests and humid ecosystems
of local and universal importance.
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The
agricultural sector will have to be ready to feed
an increasing population, by exercing a sustained
use of resources and utilizing the knowledge at the
service of the society.
Currently,
the modern applications of plant biotechnology offer
a wide range of possibilities for the increase of
productivity, diversification and the increment in
production through a sustainable agriculture, which
includes the use of biopesticides, tissue culture
techniques and application of advanced tools from
the genomics and the genetic engineering, as indispensable
complements to the conventional genetic improvement
of food crops.
Nonetheless,
the plant biotechnology applications must respond
to the increasing demand in terms of food security,
socio-economic development, international trade, as
well as to the conservation, diversification and sustainable
use of plant genetic resources, considering them as
basic inputs to the future regional agriculture. Biotechnology
should present forward concrete results, at accessible
costs, for the resolution of problems and the promotion
of productive innovation in the context of small and
medium producers.
Beyond
the progress of plant biotechnology, and its potential
for genetic improvement, there exists dilema that
have divided the public opinion as a recurrent social
response in front of the adoption of new technologies.
This dispute implies socio-economic and ethical visions
that have to reach consensus. A sustained support
to the application of biotechnology for production,
protection, post-harvest and transformation of crops
implies that the public opinion should understand
concepts linked to genetic engineering and genomics.
Positive
public perception will allow understanding the need
of developing resistant varieties of crops to biotic
or abiotic stress and enhanced nutritional quality.
Also, it will ease the development of rules related
to biosecurity, which are necessary to guarantee the
release under proper established risks to the human
health and the environment. Without these conditions,
Latin America and the Caribbean would remain far away
from their potential to reach food security and soci-economic
development.
The
agriculture of the Region must be more competitive,
internally and externally. The efforts in order to
fight poverty may be complemented through the competitiveness
and the generation of the appropriate technology,
by direct and indirect efforts. Being competitive
implies producing with efficiency and working on specific
targets related to food safety and quality. Conventional
technologies are not sufficient, so it is necessary
to open a strategic space for the use of the new biotechnologies
and make that its products be incorporated within
sustainable productive systems. On the other hand,
it is necessary to aliviate poverty, and part of the
strategy will be maximizing the direct and indirect
effects of the research technological investigation
and development. An appropriate use of the biotechnology
will result in the empowerment of small and medium
producers, through high quality sexual and agamic
seed production systems, development of bio-fertilizers
and bio-pesticides, rural agroindustries, improved
post-harvest technology and diversification of the
use of these products, which leads to autosufficiency
and competitiveness.
The
efforts of the scientists in developping crops that
eliminate or reduce the utilization of chemical agents
in the agricultural systems must be welcomed by the
agricultors and consumers within the frame of public
perception of biotechnology protected by proven knowledge
and in the existance of a reliable system of biosecurity
for risks’ evaluation and management. The public in
general must be duly informed on biotechnology as
a safe tool for the scientific improvement of the
cultures, and that the responsible modification of
plants’ genes is nothing new nor dangerours; on the
contrary, its use in agriculture is the key for the
fight against environmental degradation, hunger and
poverty. Also, the biotechnological processes and
the agricultural products derived by, must be perceived
by the general public as a need more than an option
in the provision of food that is safe for health and
environment, nutritive, of high quality and low cost.
Since
1989, FAO, through the efforts of the Technical Co-operation
Network on Plant Biotechnology, (REDBIO) is pursuing
these objectives through the interrelation of laboratories
from 32 countries, and by conducting related research
activities, human resources training, and technical
assistance to governments in subjects linked to biotechnology.
Declaration
Scientists,
researchers, participants, members of the REDBIO/FAO
and members of the International REDBIO Fundation,
gathered in Goiania, Goias, Brasil, as part of the
activities of the IV Latinamerican Meeting on Plant
Biotechnology, are alerting the civil society, governments,
institutions and decision leaders about:
The
members of the IV Latinamerican Meeting on Plant Biotechnology,
REDBIO 2001, underlie promoting the safe and responsible
application of biotechnology - specially in fragile
environments and in countries of lower incomes - and
encourage to maintain and increment the dialogue with
all the sectors and actors to concrete the development
of new biotechnologies such as molecular genomics
and the genetic engineering as key elements to the
sustainable use of genetic resources, and encourage
as well the application, whenever feasible, of advanced
biotechnologies in the integrated management of crops
within the sustainable production systems.
Considering
the current and potential deep implications of biotechnology,
we declare that the participation of the scientists
in the public debate on the benefits and risks of
the application of modern technologies must be favoured
and promoted at all levels of the public and private
institutions, specially of those meember of REDBIO.
This must take into account the need to claim and
promote the asignation of financial resources appropriate
for education, training and diffusion of biotechnology.
This conception must be made personal by politicians,
producers, processors, universities and the civil
society, who at the end are those who facilitate the
development of biotechnologies in the countries.
We
declare that the role of the producers, as well as
the consumers’ one, must be strenghtened and that
greater emphasis should be employed for the appropriate
transfer of technologies, for the sustainable application
of vegetal biotechnology, including information and
communication technologies. Being conscient of the
socio-economic benefits of biotechnology also helps
in contrarresting mis-information on biotechnology.
This last point justifies even more the efforts for
strenghtening the use of biotecnological networks
such as REDBIO/FAO and stimulate its use at national
and regional levels.