Science-based agriculture can preserve critical indigenous foods, such as cowpea, matoke (banana), cassava, and common beans, while reducing the environmental impacts of farming. On average, genetically engineered crops have cut chemical pesticide use by 37%, increased crop yields by 22%, boosted farmer profits by 38%, and reduced greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to taking 12 million cars off the road.
Evidence
Kenya gives green light to 58 GMO projects despite lawsuits and misinformation
South Africa: Unjust labor laws blamed for low exclusive breastfeeding figures
Head of premier biotechnology research institute assures Kenyans GM crops pose no danger to their health
Africa’s anti-GMO activists spread myths and fear but do not provide any scientific evidence
Soil-generated carbon credits can be used to unlock much-needed finance for smallholder farmers
Kenya opens sub-Saharan Africa’s first stem cell research lab to help fight non-communicable diseases
Kenya determined to provide affordable medical commodities in its journey to Universal Health Coverage by 2030
Alliance for Science in collaboration with Farming Future Bangladesh launches Global South Hub Asia
African countries urged to embrace new breeding techniques in the fight against food insecurity