Irene Lôbo
Reporter - Agência Brasil
Brasília - Between now and the end of the year, the Brazilian Agricultural Research Company (EMBRAPA) plans to inaugurate its first foreign branch office, EMBRAPA Africa. The office will function in Accra, the capital of Ghana, at an estimated annual cost of US$ 500 thousand. At the outset, two Brazilian researchers will be assigned to work there.
The memorandum of understanding between Brazil and Ghana was signed yesterday (26) at the opening of the Science for Life exposition, to commemorate EMBRAPA's 33 years of existence. According to EMBRAPA's coordinator of International Cooperation, Sotto Pacheco, the African unit will be entrusted with the mission of adapting Brazilian technologies that can be utilized in African soil.
Opening an office in Africa is aligned with the Brazilian government's current policy of establishing closer ties of cooperation with Africa. "The mission of the office is to facilitate and perfect the mechanisms and instruments used in technical cooperation between EMBRAPA and the African countries," Pacheco observes.
According to the coordinator, there is a growing demand for the transfer of tropical agricultural technology to the African countries. The chief partnerships involve the production of tropical fruits, cotton, rice, and cashews.
EMBRAPA already has two foreign laboratories, one in the United States and the other in Europe (France), charged with developing cutting edge technology. The African office, unlike the two laboratories, will be oriented towards development activities.
"Our physical presence will permit the development of projects that can function as showcases for EMBRAPA technologies adaptable to the African environment," Pacheco affirms.
The office will serve all of Africa, with an emphasis on the continent's Portuguese-speaking countries. Brazil also expects to reap benefits from the enterprise. "We will be able to avail ourselves of native African genetic material, such as the gene stock of forage plants. We will be able to exchange this material, bring it to Brazil, and integrate it with our agricultural and livestock system," Pacheco foresees.
Translation: David Silberstein
.