Global Bank Of Plant And Food Samples Now Available To All Under UN-Sponsored Treaty
New York, Oct 16 2006 5:00PM
Gene bank collections of the world’s key food and forage crops came under the control today of an international treaty
established by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
About 600,000 samples of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, housed at international agricultural research
centres, will now be available for use to plant breeders, farmers and researchers from around the world.
The agreement ensuring open access comes amid increasing debate about the sharp decline in agricultural biodiversity,
thanks to the effects of modern agriculture, environmental changes and increasing population density. Today just four
crops – rice, wheat, maize and potato – provide more than 60 per cent of humans’ total dietary energy from plants.
FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf said countries can draw on the collections to help deal with such problems as climate
change and pest diseases and to tackle challenges such as feeding a rapidly expanding population.
“These genes are the building blocks for the development of new plant varieties that are better suited to our needs and
to the constraints of our ecosystems,” Dr. Diouf said.
The new system follows a deal signed by the agricultural research centres and the Governing Body of the International
Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, which was approved by the FAO membership in 2001 and entered
into force in June 2004.
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