Sunday, January 11, 2009
`Biotechnology could be a tool to combat climate change,' says lecturer in India
ExpressBuzz (India): Climate change is a reality and seeing nothing, hearing nothing and doing nothing to lessen its impact on life on the earth are no longer an option, said Prof Kadambot Siddique, Director of the University of Western Australia.
Addressing students and teachers of the Kerala Agricultural University at Vellanikkara the other day, he said that biotechnology was not a solution to climate change. But it could be an important and effective tool to combat climate change. He said that considerable efforts and investments by governments and other agencies in research and development to increase food production and optimise the use of water would be essential for fighting climate change in the coming years.
He said that the impact of climate change on Indian agriculture is expected to be severe in the coming years as Indian agriculture is heavily dependent on monsoon and irrigation.… The drying-up of the atmosphere and the change in climate would make water scarce both for drinking and irrigation, making farming uneconomical for farmers in the affected areas. This would bring down the total area under cultivation with its concomitant adverse impact on overall food production in the country.
Siddique said that to make up the decline in food production, development of new high yielding, disease resistant and climate-adaptive crop species would be essential.
A GMO maize test in Bourgouin-Jallieu, Isère, France. Shot by Yann Forget, Wikimedia Commons, under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
Addressing students and teachers of the Kerala Agricultural University at Vellanikkara the other day, he said that biotechnology was not a solution to climate change. But it could be an important and effective tool to combat climate change. He said that considerable efforts and investments by governments and other agencies in research and development to increase food production and optimise the use of water would be essential for fighting climate change in the coming years.
He said that the impact of climate change on Indian agriculture is expected to be severe in the coming years as Indian agriculture is heavily dependent on monsoon and irrigation.… The drying-up of the atmosphere and the change in climate would make water scarce both for drinking and irrigation, making farming uneconomical for farmers in the affected areas. This would bring down the total area under cultivation with its concomitant adverse impact on overall food production in the country.
Siddique said that to make up the decline in food production, development of new high yielding, disease resistant and climate-adaptive crop species would be essential.
A GMO maize test in Bourgouin-Jallieu, Isère, France. Shot by Yann Forget, Wikimedia Commons, under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
Labels:
agriculture,
biotechnology,
GMOs,
india
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