EXCLUSIVE: Super Banana Could Save Millions in Africa
The
project plans to have the special banana varieties - enriched with alpha and
beta carotene which the body converts to vitamin A - growing in Uganda by 2020.
The
bananas are now being sent to the United States, and it is expected that the
six-week trial measuring how well they lift vitamin A levels in humans will
begin soon.
"Good
science can make a massive difference here by enriching staple crops such as
Ugandan bananas with pro-vitamin A and providing poor and subsistence-farming
populations with nutritionally rewarding food," said project leader
Professor James Dale.
The
Queensland University of Technology (QUT) project, backed by the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, hopes to see conclusive results by year end.
"We
know our science will work," Professor Dale said.
"We
made all the constructs, the genes that went into bananas, and put them into
bananas here at QUT."
Dale
said the Highland or East African cooking banana was a staple food in East
Africa, but had low levels of micro-nutrients, particularly pro-vitamin A and
iron.
"The
consequences of vitamin A deficiency are dire with 650,000-700,000 children
world-wide dying ... each year and at least another 300,000 going blind,"
he said.
Researchers
decided that enriching the staple food was the best way to help ease the
problem.
While
the modified banana looks the same on the outside, inside the flesh is more
orange than a cream colour, but Dale said he did not expect this to be a
problem.
He said
once the genetically modified bananas were approved for commercial cultivation
in Uganda, the same technology could potentially be expanded to crops in other
countries - including Rwanda, parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya
and Tanzania.
"In
West Africa farmers grow plantain bananas and the same technology could easily
be transferred to that variety as well," he said.