The promises of new and emerging biotechnologies receive continuing attention and promotion. Many governments place high hopes in the new technologies to deliver development. Policy papers and public statements refer to modern biotechnology, genomics, proteomics, and increasingly, nanotechnology.

For developing countries and countries with economies in transition, this raises fundamental questions of development priorities, technology choices and availability of financial and human resources.

There is much to learn from the experiences of developed countries. This includes: the growth of the pharmaceutical, agriculture and chemical (seeds and agro-chemicals) industries and their shaping of the investment climate and consumer market; the evolution of intellectual property standards and rules; the experiences of ?biotechnology clusters? in the United States upon which many developing countries are drawing lessons; the commercial interest in microorganisms and their derivatives such as enzymes and other biomolecules.

Biotechnology: Continuing hype?

At a recent biotechnology industry meeting in San Francisco, governments and local authorities across the US and as far away as Malaysia were busy courting biotech companies to set up a presence in their respective home grounds. But as this article ex […]

Why Biotech Patents Are Patently Absurd – Scientific Briefing on TRIPs and Related Issues

The patenting of life-forms and living processes is covered under WTO’s Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights. This scientific briefing explains why such patents should be revoked and banned. […]

The Economics of Biotech

Biotechnology is considered both as an industry and as a technology which will spur the development of the countries of the South and lift them out of poverty. The following article considers whether there is any justification for this. […]

Monsanto and GE – Risks to Investors

Monsanto, the world’s leader in developing and marketing GE seeds, is at a risk of financial setback if it continues with its current business focus on GE-related products, says Innovest Strategic Value Advisors in a report commissioned by Greenpeace. […]

Financial risks that GE foods pose to Kraft Foods Inc. and shareholders

An analysis showed that the company faces risks from producing GE foods that include product liability, biopharm contamination, consumer rejection and insurance industry concern, thus raises questions to its economic viability. […]

Africa – the new frontier for the GE industry

As a result of difficulties in penetrating the European market because of growing consumer awareness and rejection, biotech corporations and the governments that back them have turned to the developing world, particularly Africa. […]