Title: South Africa
1- South Africa
- Food, Agriculture and Biotechnology
- Food Safety and Quality (FP6 Theme 5)
- Food, Agriculture and Biotechnology (FP7 Theme 2)
- Europe, March 2006
www.esastap.org.za
Ms Cristina Pinto for Dr Geoff Meese EC-SA FP6
NCP Theme 5 food.ncp_at_esastap.org.za gmeese_at_csir.co
.za
2Overview of Presentation
- Research capacity in South Africa
- Research and development
- Some comparative advantages
- Successes in FP6 Theme 5 Food safety and
quality - The future
- South Africa in FP7
- NEPAD (New Partnership for Africas Development)
- Support measures for cooperation
3Research Capacity in South Africa (1)
- Universities
- Research Councils
- Private and Public Sectors
- Industry, SMEs, NGOs
- Government (national, provincial, local)
- Links on www.esastap.org.za
4Research Capacity in South Africa (2)
Universities Examples of universities with
international experience
- Rhodes University
- Stellenbosch University
- Tshwane University
- University of the Western Cape
- University of the Witwatersrand
- University of Cape Town
- University of the Free State
- University of KwaZulu-Natal
- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
- University of Pretoria
5Research Capacity in South Africa (3)
- Research Councils
- ARC (Agricultural Research Council)
- CSIR (Council for Scientific and Industrial
Research) - HSRC (Human Sciences Research Council)
- MRC (Medical Research Council)
- NRF (National Research Foundation)
- Mintek
- SABS (South African Bureau of Standards)
- Water Research Commission
6Research Capacity in South Africa (4)
-
- Private and Public Sectors
- Limited RD capacity (multi-nationals, trusts,
fledgling sector) - Primarily support of development work, little
basic research - Seeking to becoming more international and
linking up with South African partners
international companies looking for RD partners - SMEs limited research capacity in the food
industry slowly growing in biotechnology (aided
by the Biotechnology Regional Innovation Centres
and GODISA incubators) - NGOs key role at community level
- Government departments
7Research and Development
- South Africa has a solid history of engagement
with traditional biotechnology. It has produced
one of the largest brewing companies in the
world, makes wines that compare with the best,
has developed many new animal breeds and plant
varieties, some of which are used commercially
all over the world, and has competitive
industries in the manufacturing of dairy products
such as cheese, yoghurt, maas, baker's yeast and
other fermentation products - However, South Africa has failed to extract value
from the more recent advances in biotechnology,
particularly over the last 25 years with the
emergence of genetics and genomic sciences. - South African National Biotechnology Strategy
8Key Biotechnology Issues and Challenges
- Institutional arrangements
- Human resource considerations
- Funding of research and development
- Commercialising biotechnology
- Policy and legal instruments
- Ethics
- Publics understanding of biotechnology
9South African Agriculture
- A dual economy a well-developed commercial
sector and a subsistence-oriented sector in
rural areas - Primary production is 2.6 of GDP
- 9 of the employment in the formal sector
- Agri-industry is 15 of GDP
- Agricultural exports are about 8 (15 from
deciduous fruit) of total SA exports
10Challenges facing South African agriculture
- Rural, small-scale indigenous farming population
- Increasing population
- Urban areas growing rapidly
- No net change in marine fish production
- Increasing damage to the ecological foundations
of agriculture - Environmental, social, economic and agricultural
implications of biotechnology advances
11Agricultural Biotechnology Research Priorities
- Improving crop production
- Improving the nutritional value of food
- Animal health and production
- Support for suitable industrial development
12Examples of SA Biotechnology Applications in
Agriculture
13(No Transcript)
14Agricultural Research Activities
- Agricultural engineering, soil, climate and water
- Plant crops and products - fruit, grapes, grain,
vegetables, ornamental plants and industrial
crops - Plant protection - Forestry and Agricultural
Biotechnology Institute (FABI) - Animal Improvement
- Veterinary and animal health and nutrition
(Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute - top
veterinary institute in Africa produced animal
vaccines such as anthrax, botulism and blue
tongue virus also developed diagnostic tests.
Innovations are manufactured and marketed by
Onderstepoort Biological Products (OBP), which
supplies veterinary vaccines to the international
market.
15Biotechnology Research Activities
- Human health biotechnology
- Animal health biotechnology
- Plant biotechnology - Pharmaplanta, Gates Fdn
SuperSorghum, Resurrection plant - Environmental and mining BioSure, BioMine
- Industrial biotechnology
16Food Research Activities
- Cereal expertise - especially key cereals for
Africa - Logistics and cold chain technology
- Packaging - strong export link
- Shelf-life extension e.g. INCO-DEV 2002-2005
Combination of osmotic and microwave drying for
production of high quality shelf-stable fruits
Partners Ireland, Mozambique, South Africa,
Spain, Sweden, Uganda, Zambia - Value addition to waste e.g. REPRO
(www.repro-food.net ) - Rural community food security initiatives e.g.
value addition to indigenous foods - Nutrition
- Mycotoxins
- Food microbiology
- Bench, lab and scale-up facilities in food,
chemicals and fermentation
17Regulatory Considerations
- Genetically Modified Organisms Act, 1997 (Act No.
15 of 1997) - Regulates all activities with regard to
genetically modified organisms. Specific permits
are issued for the deliberate release of
genetically modified organisms. Risk assessments
are conducted prior to the deliberate release of
any genetically modified organisms. - Biodiversity Act, 2004
- Gives effect to international agreements
affecting biodiversity binding on South Africa,
and secures - conservation of the biological diversity of South
Africa - sustainable use of biological resources, and
- fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising
from the use and application of genetic resources
and material. - Regulations under Foodstuffs, Cosmetics and
Disinfectants Act, 1972 (Act No. 54 of 1972) - Govern the labelling of foodstuffs obtained
through certain techniques of genetic
engineering. - The Patents Act, 1978
(Act No. 57 of 1978) - Animal Improvement Act,
1998 (Act No. 62 of 1998) - Plant Breeders' Rights
Act, 1976 (Act No. 15 of 1976)
18Some Comparative Advantages
- Strong export industry
- Especially fruit
- Shelf-life extension packaging, coatings etc.
- GM technology, allied to good biosafety protocols
- Biodiversity - novel foods and novel genes
- Indigenous Knowledge Systems e.g. traditional
foods and medicines - Source of genetic material
19Successes in FP6 Theme 5Food quality and safety
- Safe Foods (IP) - Food safety through risk
analysis - EU-SOL (IP) - High quality solanaceous crops
- REPRO (STREP) - Value addition to waste from the
food industry - PARASOL (STREP) - Control of nematodes in
ruminants - EAGLES Food Forum (SSA) - Network between EU and
developing countries (DCs) to consider food
safety - Food-N-Co (SSA) - Theme 5 NCP cooperation between
EU and Developing Countries
20The Future South Africa in FP7 (1)
- FP7 Theme 2 (Food, Agriculture and Biotechnology)
is anticipated to be much broader, thus
potentially enlarging the capacity and research
areas. - The challenge is to consider the EU priorities
and the activities, and determine where SA can
add value that is aligned to SAs needs and long
term strategy.
21The Future South Africa in FP7 (2)
- Activity 1 Sustainable Biodiversity
- Established omics facilities such as the
National Bioinformatics Network - Value addition to the biodiversity - 26 000
indigenous plants, plus fungal and microbial
resources
22The Future South Africa in FP7 (3)
- Activity 2 Fork to Farm
- Traceability for the export market
- International standards (e.g. HACCP) in food
industry - Innovative food processing
- Nutrition - South Africa is developing the
diseases of the West, plus other major problem
areas such as HIV/AIDS
23The Future South Africa in FP7 (4)
- Activity 3 Non-food Products
- Forestry - a major industry in South Africa
- Biofuels - increasing interest
- Value addition to waste
24The Future NEPAD (1) (New Partnership for
Africas Development)
- The Africa Biosciences Initiative (ABI) seeks to
harness regional capacity in biosciences - A regional network comprises a Hub and a Network
of nodes throughout the region
25The Future NEPAD (2)
- Four Hubs identified
- North Africa Biosciences Network (NAB, based at
the National Research Centre in Egypt) - Biosciences Eastern and Central Africa Network
(BECA, based at ILRI in Kenya) - West Africa Biosciences Network (WAB, based at
ISRA in Senegal) - Southern Africa Biosciences Network (SANBio,
based at the CSIR in South Africa)
26The Future NEPAD (3)
- SABH / SANBio will comprise 12 countries Angola,
Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique,
Namibia, Republic of South Africa, Seychelles,
Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe - The Hubs and Networks will serve as a way into
the regions and the continent in the biosciences
27 Ms Cristina Pinto For Dr Geoff Meese EC-SA FP6
NCP Theme 5 food.ncp_at_esastap.org.za gmeese_at_csir.co
.za
Presentation photographs courtesy of SA Tourism