By Geoffrey Lean,
Environment Editor
Hungry for an
alternative Tewolde Berhan believes that organic farming is the
only real solution to famine in Africa. Sally J Hall meets the
quiet but formidable Ethiopian who has become a thorn in the side
of the GM foods lobby 27 June 2005 Organic farming is a
slow-to-grow, low-yield industry favoured by middle-class parents
who have the time and money to meander the overpriced aisles of
Waitrose, deliberating over wild rocket or white asparagus. Right?
Wrong, says Tewolde Berhan. He thinks organic farming could be the
solution to Ethiopia's famines. The chief of the country's
Environment Agency has worked his way through academia and
government to become one of the world's most influential voices in
the biotechnology field. Berhan believes that, properly applied,
his approach could save the lives of many of the thousands of
Africans who die every day as a result of hunger and poverty.
He maintains that
genetically modified organisms (GMOs) remove control from local
farmers. He speaks for a growing number who believe that Africa
should return to natural, sustainable methods of agriculture
better suited to its people and environment.
Can one man hope to
stand against governments and the huge multinationals? Visiting
London, Berhan appears to be a frail - if nattily dressed -
sexagenarian. But our conversation reveals his determination,
intelligence and encyclopedic memory, combining to create an
indomitable force.
Asked why bad
harvests seem to have a greater impact on Ethiopia than its
neighbors, he has a simple yet stark response. "It's largely
because of the lack of infrastructure," he says. "The
road system in Ethiopia has doubled in the past 10 years, but is
still very poor.
"Ethiopia is
still an agrarian society, and there isn't one such country that
hasn't had famines," he adds. "The reasons are clear:
some years you have plenty and others not enough. If you don't
have the technological and financial capacity and the
infrastructure to store in good years, you can't make provision
for the bad. People here depend entirely on the crops they produce
in their fields, so when one season fails, the result is
famine." Born in 1940, Berhan graduated in 1963 from Addis
Ababa University and took a doctorate at the University of Wales
in 1969. Later posts as dean of science at Addis Ababa, keeper of
the National Herbarium and director of the Ethiopian Conservation
Strategy Secretariat kept him in touch with the agricultural needs
of Ethiopia's people.
In 1995, he was made
director general of the Environmental Protection Authority of
Ethiopia, in effect becoming the country's chief scientist in
agriculture. A strong critic of GMOs, he's a powerful voice in
lobbying on food safety. His most notable triumph came in
negotiations on biosafety in Cartagena, Colombia in 1999. Berhan
acted as chief negotiator for a group of southern hemisphere
countries. He helped to secure an agreement to protect biosafety
and biodiversity, while maintaining respect for the traditional
rights of the Third World population, gained against strong
opposition from the European Union and North America.
So why is organic
farming the answer? Given low yields, poor soil and drought, you'd
think that industrial farming would help Ethiopia to maximize
production. Not so, Berhan says. "Organic farming deviates
little from the natural environment in supplying nutrients to
crops. We've developed the ability to change things in a big way
and, without considering the consequences, we create disasters.
Look at what happened with DDT.
"Organic
farming disturbs nature as little as possible and reduces those
risks. Intensive farming has led to the exacerbation of pests and
diseases, and loss of flavor in food."
These views are at
odds with the "conventional" industry. Tony Combes, the
director of corporate affairs for Monsanto UK, a big player in the
GM market, says: "Going organic isn't the way to increase
yields. But then, neither is going totally GM. Farmers need
solutions suitable for local predicaments. This means choosing
from a range of options - organic, conventional and GM. If yields
can be increased, that surplus can be sold." Berhan is
undeterred. He has persuaded the Ethiopian government to let him
demonstrate his ideas in the Axum area of Ethiopia. Old
field-management techniques have been resurrected, while methods
new to the area, like compost-making, have been successful.
Those who think
organic farming means low yields will be surprised by Berhan's
evidence. "When well managed, and as fertility builds over
years, organic agriculture isn't inferior in yield. Now, farmers
don't want chemical fertilizers. They say, 'Why should we pay for
something we can get for free?'" Berhan expresses gratitude
for the West's famine-relief efforts, but he has reservations.
"When countries want to help, they may not know how, so the
intention has to be appreciated. But if you go beyond the
intention and begin to dictate terms, it becomes more sinister. In
times of shortage, making food aid available is helpful - for that
year. If you keep making it available, you discourage
production."
He believes there
are times when food aid can be more about control by Western
governments than assistance. "The feeling is strong that this
is deliberate. I attended a meeting where farmers from the USA
were present. I told them a story I'd read about how rice
production in Liberia was depressed because of cheap imports from
the USA. The American farmers said this was a deliberate policy by
the US State Department to make countries dependent on them for
food.
"I began to
investigate and discovered that, while the EU has abandoned its
policy of providing food aid, initially sending money so that food
can be bought locally, the US still insists it will only give food
in kind. This makes me feel those farmers were right."
Berhan insists on
the necessity of further trials for GM crops, and believes extreme
caution should be used in their growth and trade. His application
for a visa to attend talks in Canada on GM labeling was turned
down earlier this year, suggesting that his influence is feared.
"We were finalizing the labeling of grain commodities,"
he says. "A compromise had been reached in 2000 for labeling
to say, 'This product may contain GMOs,' but we wanted to toughen
it up, to say, 'This product contains these GMOs,' and to list
them."
He also contests
that GMOs give higher yield. "This is mainly hype. So far,
there's not one GM crop that produces higher yields per acre than
conventional crops. They offer an economical advantage to farmers
as they can apply herbicide in large doses and not have to worry
about weeds: that's all."
After protests from
the media and groups such as Greenpeace, the visa was granted. Dr
Eric Darier, GM campaigner for Greenpeace Canada, explained why it
was so important that Berhan attended. "He is truly one of
the key 'fathers' of the biosafety protocol," Darier says.
"It was convenient for the Canadian government [to refuse the
visa], as it prevented a major critic and opponent of pro-GM
Canadian policy from attending two of the three days of the
workshop on liability. Canada has failed to ratify the biosafety
protocol. In view of the fact that the Canadian government has
done everything to undermine the efforts of the international
community to adopt a strict, effective biosafety protocol, the
delays in issuing the visa are evidence of Canada's bad
faith."
Is Berhan bitter?
Far from it. "I think [the visa refusal] was based on a
mistaken calculation. If anything, it gave the labeling issue
higher
visibility. We told
the Canadian government: either you accept multilateral
discussions, or the Office for the Commission of Biological
Diversity [based in Montreal], must move to another country."
The threat worked.
Berhan's message is
compelling - and he is in demand worldwide. In the past month
alone, he has travelled to Austria, the UK, Tunisia and Norway. He
returns to the UK in July to give a talk for the Soil Association,
where he will ask: "Can Organic Farming Feed the World?"
He is a huge force in trying to prove that it can.
The Soil Association
will be at the Royal Geographical Society in London on Tuesday 12
July (0117 987 4586; www.soilassociation.org)
Source: The
Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.