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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Issues | January 2008 

Controversial Proposals Expected at WEF Gathering
email this pageprint this pageemail usDavid Cronin - Inter Press Service
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Irish musician Bono, left, gestures as former United States Vice-President Al Gore reacts as they address a conference at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Thursday Jan. 24, 2008. (AP/Michel Euler)
 
Brussels - The seemingly incongruous presence of Bono, a pop singer rarely spotted without his wraparound sunglasses amid the sombre suits of business and political leaders attending the World Economic Forum (WEF), should ensure that the question of how to end African poverty features prominently in media coverage of the January 23-27 event.

For several consecutive years, the U2 singer has been arguably the most illustrious guest in Davos, the Swiss ski resort that hosts this gathering of "fat-cats in the snow", as he once described the forum.

In 2005, he appeared alongside Tony Blair, then Britain’s prime minister, South Africa’s president Thabo Mbeki and former US president Bill Clinton, to declare that addressing Africa’s problems is not a cause but an emergency.

Yet, while Bono’s stated objectives of eliminating the debt crippling poor countries and boosting Africa’s share of world trade are broadly supported by anti-poverty activists, some of the prescriptions favoured by the bulk of the forum’s participants are highly contentious.

This year, for example, the forum will discuss a paper on improving African agriculture, drawn up by the Business Alliance Against Chronic Hunger.

The alliance, which bands together the food giant Unilever, sportswear manufacturer Nike and express delivery firm TNT, argues that Africa is "finally poised to bring about its own Green Revolution", alluding to the increased agricultural production observed in Mexico and India between the 1940s and 1960s.

It then infers that companies promoting biofuels and biotechnology could play a leading role in such a "revolution". In a pilot project cited, the leading producer of genetically modified (GM) seeds, Monsanto, is aiming to increase maize harvests in the Siaya district of Kenya.

Two companies developing biofuels -- Spectre and Technoserve -- are also involved in that project. One of Spectre’s main areas of focus is in growing jatropha, a tough weed with oily seeds that can be used as a source of energy. During August, riots broke out in India, because peasants had been driven from their land to make way for jatropha plantations.

Mohammed Issah from the Social Enterprise Development (SEND) Foundation in Ghana, said that multi-national companies "are trying to capture the agriculture sector by saying they have the solution to the hunger situation in Africa".

Neither biofuels nor biotechnology will benefit small-scale farmers in Africa, he added.

"If companies take the responsibility of providing GM seeds, then the control of planting seeds moves from farmers to multi-national companies," he told IPS. "Of course, the objective of companies getting into these areas is basically to make profits."

"Farmers have already been using indigenous knowledge for planting material that is suitable to the environment in which they produce. What they need is support to improve the practices they already have, not the introduction of genetically modified seeds."

Klaus Schwab, the German-born academic who founded the WEF, acknowledged that the surge in biofuels production is one of the key issues that policy-makers will have to grapple with.

"Biofuels have an impact on water management," he said on January 16. "They have an impact on how we use arable land. They have an impact on food security. We have seen food prices growing substantially, leading to substantial social issues because poor people are more hit than people with higher incomes."

Last year, the European Union’s governments recommended that biofuels should account for at least 10 percent of transport fuels used in the 27-country bloc by 2020.

But Louis Michel, the European commissioner for development aid, has recently called that objective into question. In an interview with IPS, Michel said there is a danger that traditional farming in Africa would be damaged if biofuels are cultivated on land previously used to grow food.

Gertrude Falk from the FoodFirst Information and Action Network (FIAN) said that peasants have recently been evicted in Uganda so that palm oil can be produced from forests. Palm oil is the principal biofuel used in Europe.

"Biofuels is a very dangerous issue," Falk stressed. "It reduces the area available for food production and in the long run it drives the price of food up."

Regarded as one of the most influential events in shaping the international political agenda, the WEF is dominated by business leaders. Over 900 chief executives, including those from about 75 of the planet’s richest firms, are to attend this year’s event. By contrast, there will be only ten leaders of trade unions.

Top politicians scheduled to attend include Condoleezza Rice, the U.S. secretary of state, Gordon Brown, the British prime minister, Alvaro Uribe, the Colombian president, Al Gore, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and former U.S. vice-president, and Robert Zoellick, the World Bank president.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive, will have a sizeable contingent there, too. Peter Mandelson and Günter Verheugen, the commissioners for trade and industry, are both expected.

A group monitoring the activities of business lobbyists says that it is not surprising that Europe’s most powerful individuals are drawn to the Alpine hideaway. "Davos is not only a comfortable place, it is one where demonstrations are largely impossible because it is in the mountains," said Olivier Hoedeman from the Corporate Europe Observatory.

"The presence of numerous commissioners at these meetings shows how they tend to promote the interests of an economic elite, rather than deepening a connection with European citizens," Hoedeman added.

It is extremely ironic, he added, that the fight against hunger is being championed by firms known to be in favour of liberalising world trade in a way that has been inimical to Africa’s interests.

"Agri-business companies over the past number of decades have done more than anyone else to disrupt food security systems on the African continent," he said, describing the Business Alliance Against Chronic Hunger as a "very cynical exercise" to "promote some very harmful initiatives like genetic engineering and biofuels".



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