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Editorial
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Seed Info aims to stimulate information exchange and regular communication
among seed staff in the Central and West Asia and North Africa (CWANA)
region. The purpose is to help strengthen national seed programs, and
thus improve the supply of quality seed to farmers.
Formal seed system requires mandatory varietal and seed certification,
where seed production fields are inspected and seed lots are tested for
quality, for the commercialization of certified seed. Such mandatory system
requires huge investment, and many developing countries lack the physical,
financial and human resources for implementing such comprehensive certification
schemes. In the 1980s, the FAO proposed an alternative seed certification
scheme called Quality Declared Seed (QDS) to compliment stringent
and costly mandatory certification schemes. Above all, the QDS system
proposed realistic and achievable field and seed standards; and shifted
the responsibility for seed quality from certification agencies to seed
producers. In the NEWS AND VIEWS section Britt Granqvist from BriAgri
ApS Consultancy Company in Denmark provides readers with the practical
advantages of introducing and implementing a QDS system for local seed
production and marketing by small-scale farmers, taking into consideration
the experiences of Tanzania. There is also news on the AFSTA Seed Congress
2009 in South Africa, and the World Seed Congress in Antalya, Turkey,
the establishment of an investment fund for African seed companies by
AGRA and AAC and the global growth and adoption of biotech crops.
The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) and the African Agriculture
Capital (AAC), a venture capital investment fund that invests in several
small African seed companies, launched the African Seed Investment Fund
(ASIF). The first fund of its kind in the continent, ASIF will invest
in at least 20 small- and medium-size seed companies in Southern and Eastern
Africa over the next five years. The fund will operate in eight countries:
Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.
According to the International Service for Acquisition of Agri-biotech
Applications (ISAAA), consistent and substantial economic, environmental
and welfare benefits offered by biotech crops, led millions of small and
resource-poor farmers around the world to continue planting more hectares
of biotech crops in 2008, the thirteenth year of commercialization.
ISAAA reported that the global area of biotech crops has reached a record
125 million ha in 2008, from 114 million ha in 2007. About 13.3 million
farmers planted biotech crops in 2008 in 25 countries (10 developed and
15 developing countries), up from 1.3 million in 2007. Bolivia become
the ninth country in Latin America to adopt biotech crops in 2007, while
Burkina Faso in Africa began planting biotech cotton, and Egypt planted
biotech maize for the first time in 2008.
The section on SEED PROGRAMS includes news
from Afghanistan, Egypt, Ethiopia, Pakistan and Turkey. The news from
Afghanistan focuses on the wheat varietal releases by the FAO-EU Seed
Project. We are also reporting on the efforts of ICARDA and CIMMYT in
developing stem rust resistant varieties and accelerated seed multiplication
in selected countries including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Egypt, Ethiopia,
Nepal and Pakistan.
The RESEARCH section aims to capture information
on adaptive research or issues relevant to seed program development in
the region and beyond. In the present issue, however, we feature an article
entitled Knowledge and Innovation for Agricultural Development
prepared by Kwadwo Asenso-Okyere and Kristin Davis from IFPRI. The article
provides an insight from knowledge generation to key policy options for
promoting knowledge and innovation for agricultural development.
Seed Info encourages the exchange of information in the national,
regional, and global seed industry. We encourage our readers to share
their views through this newsletter. Your contributions are most welcome
in Arabic, English, or French.
The questionnaire seeking your opinion on the contents, improvements and
best ways of sending you the Seed Info newsletter is still open
until 31 August. To complete this short survey on-line, please visit the
site at:
http://www.icarda.org/publications/SurveySeedInfo/ICARDA_SeedInfo_User_Survey.asp
Have a nice read
Zewdie
Bishaw
Editor
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