The FAO Biotechnology Forum was established
in March 2000 with the aim of providing quality balanced information on agricultural biotechnology in developing
countries and to make a neutral platform available for people to exchange views and
experiences on this subject. It has hosted 16 moderated e-mail conferences so far.
The latest one, Conference 16, ran from 8 June to 8 July 2009 and was entitled Learning from the past: Successes and
failures with agricultural biotechnologies in developing countries over the last 20 years. Its aim was to analyse
past experiences of applying different agricultural biotechnologies in the crop, forestry, livestock, fisheries/aquaculture
and agro-industry sectors in developing countries. During the conference, 121 messages were posted by 83 people living in 36 different
countries, the greatest number coming from India, Nigeria, Argentina, United States and Cameroon. A total of 90
messages (i.e. 74%) were posted by participants living in developing countries. All the Messages posted are
available on the web. The conference was held to complement a series of technical documents being prepared for the FAO international technical
conference
on Agricultural Biotechnologies in Developing Countries which takes place
in Guadalajara, Mexico.
The previous e-mail conference was devoted to the role of agricultural biotechnologies
for production of bioenergy in developing countries, with a major focus on liquid biofuels.
The conference took place from 10 November to 14 December 2008 and was organised in collaboration with
the FAO Working Group on Bioenergy. The conference covered
biotechnology applications for first-generation and second-generation biofuels and, to a lesser degree, for biogas
production and for biodiesel production from microalgae. A Background Document was
finalised before the conference began. During the 5-week conference, a total of 88 messages were posted, coming
from 52 different people in 21 different countries. A total of 60% of messages were from people living in developing
countres. See the Archives of the conference to read the messages.
The 14 previous e-mail conferences, that took place from 2000 to 2007, dealt with issues such as the appropriateness
of agricultural biotechnologies; their impact on hunger and food security; gene flow (GMOs), intellectual
property rights; their role in the agricultural research agenda; regulation of GMOs; their role in food
processing; their role in the characterisation and conservation of genetic resources for food and agriculture;
the potential of marker-assisted selection; public participation in decision-making regarding GMOs; and, most
recently, their role for coping with water scarcity in developing countries.
Forum Publications:
1. The book on its first six e-mail conferences, entitled
Agricultural biotechnology for developing countries: Results of an electronic forum was published in 2002 and is
also available in Spanish and
Chinese.
2. The book on conferences 7 to 12,
entitled Results from the FAO Biotechnology Forum:
Background and dialogue on selected issues was published in 2007 and is currently being translated into French.
3. In 2006, the book entitled The role of
biotechnology in exploring and protecting agricultural genetic resources was published, containing the
background and summary documents from the 13th e-mail conference plus papers from an international workshop held as
part of build up to the conference.
4. In January 2009, the book on Coping with
water scarcity: What role for biotechnologies? was published, presenting
the background and summary documents from conference 14.
Objectives of the Forum:
To provide an open forum that will allow a wide range of parties, including
governmental and non-governmental organisations, policy makers and the
general public, to discuss and exchange views and experiences about
specific issues concerning biotechnology in food and agriculture for
developing countries. This is done through a series of moderated e-mail
conferences, each running for a limited time period only, on specific topics, for which
background (before the conferences) and summary documents (after) are
produced.
Background to the Forum:
Farmers and specialist breeders have developed and used many
biotechnologies to improve plants and animals within agriculture, or to
make food and agricultural products. Now, improvements in molecular
science and in reproductive biology and a radical new understanding of
genetics have resulted in the development of a range of new cutting-edge
techniques. These allow us to directly modify genetic material, better
study the extent/pattern of genetic variation, and they may greatly speed
up progress. They may also help us to tackle so far intractable problems.
The Forum will focus on such techniques.
Biotechnology is a collection of tools that can be applied to many areas
of food and agriculture (including animals, crops, fish and forest trees).
This collection comprises scientific tools that are very diverse and
sometimes highly controversial. They may pose ethical problems and
require substantial debate among policy makers, researchers and the
public at large. Particularly in some areas of biotechnology, the debate
has become quite polarised and there is therefore an increasing need for
quality, unbiased, factual information. It is in this spirit that the
Forum was established in March 2000.
Conferences that have been held so far
Conference 1 (March 20 - May 26, 2000):
How appropriate are currently available biotechnologies in the crop sector for food production and
agriculture in developing countries
Conference 2 (April 25 - June 30, 2000):
How appropriate are currently available biotechnologies for the forestry sector in developing
countries
Conference 3 (June 12 - August 25, 2000):
The appropriateness, significance and application of biotechnology options in the animal
agriculture of developing countries
Conference 4 (August 1 - October 8, 2000):
How appropriate are currently available biotechnologies for the
fishery sector in developing countries ?
Conference 5 (November 1 - December 17, 2000):
Can agricultural biotechnology help to
reduce hunger and increase food security in developing countries ?
Conference 6 (March 30 - May 13, 2001):
The impact of intellectual property rights (IPRs) on
food and agriculture in developing countries
Conference 7 (May 31 - July 5, 2002):
Gene flow from GM to non-GM populations in the crop,
forestry, animal and fishery sectors
Conference 8 (November 13 - December 17, 2002):
What should be the role and focus of
biotechnology in the agricultural research agendas of developing countries?
Conference 9 (April 28 - May 25, 2003):
Regulating GMOs in developing and transition
countries
Conference 10 (November 17 - December 14, 2003):
Molecular marker assisted selection as a potential tool
for genetic improvement of crops, forest trees, livestock and fish in developing countries
Conference 11 (June 14 - July 15, 2004):
Biotechnology applications in food
processing: Can developing countries benefit?
Conference 12 (January 17 - February 13, 2005):
Public participation in decision-making regarding GMOs in developing countries: How to effectively
involve rural people
Conference 13 (June 6 - July 3, 2005):
The role of biotechnology for the characterisation and conservation of crop, forest,
animal and fishery genetic resources in developing countries
Conference 14 (March 5 - April 1, 2007):
Coping with water scarcity in developing
countries: What role for agricultural biotechnologies?
Conference 15 (November 10 - December 14, 2008):
The role of agricultural biotechnologies
for production of bioenergy in developing countries
Conference 16 (June 8 - July 8, 2009):
Learning from the past: Successes and failures with agricultural biotechnologies in
developing countries over the last 20 years
Awards/Reviews of the Forum website
1) Selection by The Internet Scout Project for inclusion in the Scout Report (May 26, 2000), a weekly current
awareness publication that highlights new and newly discovered Internet resources of interest to researchers and
educators. See http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sr/2000/scout-000526.html.
2) Chosen as a "Hot Pick" in the Netwatch section of the journal Science (28 July 2000).
See http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/289/5479/503b
3) Chosen by New Scientist as the "Site of the Day" on 29 December 2000.