Business
Director Prescribes Tissue Culture For Food Security
A Deputy Director with the National Agricultural Seeds Council (NASC), Mr Sunday Abimiku, has recommended the use of tissue culture for maximum farm yield in the country.
Abimiku made the call at the Inauguration of the council’s Institutional Bio-safety Committee on Tuesday in Abuja.
Abimiku observed that if the use of tissue culture was included in methods of crops production under the Agricultural Transformation Agenda, a lot more high yielding seeds would be produced.
According to him, tissue culture does not need to be regulated and it is widely used to produce clones of plants through a method known as micro-propagation.
While it offers certain advantages over traditional methods of propagation, it also enables the production of exact copies of plants and allows plants to mature early.
It also facilitates the production of multiples of plants even in the absence of seeds.
NAN reports that the newly inaugurated committee, comprising seven members, includes representatives of the NASC, Agricultural Research Council of Nigeria, (ARCN) and the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
ARCN was designated to represent the National Agricultural Research Institutes (NARI’s) in Nigeria while NAN would represent the media.
Dr Adetula Adegorite, the Chairman of the committee, in her address, said the main objective of the committee was to ensure the safety and quality of Genetically Modified seeds.
She said the committee would ensure that bio-diversity, environment, human health and food were not affected by biotechnology.
“We must make sure that all genetically-modified products being researched are safe.
“We will also ensure that we safeguard any risk through risk assessment and management, which will be done through laboratory testing.
“We will also create awareness and train our staff through workshops and sensitise the society on what biotechnology and bio-safety are all about through the media.’’
Adetula posited that biotechnology would help the country meet its quest for food sufficiency and also reduce farm loss by farmers.
According to her, Brazil, the second largest producer of agricultural commodities in the world, was able to attain its position through biotechnology, urging Nigeria to take a cue from this.
In his remarks, Mr Rufus Ebegba, the representative of the Minister of Environment, said that Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) and products were not hazardous to human health.
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