OFABKenya
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OFABKenya
@OFABKenya
We bring together stakeholders to share knowledge and experiences on #Agribiotech with the aim of building an enabling environment for informed decision making.













Another one! DrumBeat 90! Here is a detailed look into the first month of 2026 which has been, quite frankly, exciting. We are off to a fast start, baton firmly clasped in hand. With a truckload of experiences and lessons from 2025, there is just enough to ruminate on already, and we are excited for what lies ahead! Our DrumBeat issue 90 features the @afri_isaaa Director, Dr @mkarembu , presenting her expectations for what we believe, with foundation that has been laid by the team and partners, will be a remarkable 2026. We also take great pride in Zimbabwe’s launch of the One Health Strategic Plan of December 2025, and we showcase some of the efforts towards this great achievement, alongside expectations now that we are here. We have been busy convening meetings; we best not divulge what this has been about because all this is available in the DrumBeat here: africenter.isaaa.org/drumbeat/issue…. We are also pleased to share an exciting call for scientists, innovators, and bio-enthusiasts to apply for How To Grow (Almost) Anything (HTGAA), a global, free online program hosted by the MIT Media Lab. 📸: Agri-stakeholders meetings where they pushed for strategic public education on safe pesticide use



Probably due to misrepresentation, or poor communication in the past, or both, science has for eons been the bane of many people's lives. Hard to understand. Technical, spoken only in sophisticated labs. Pipettes, crucibles of all shapes, reagents with long names, protracted court cases out of new scientific innovations. In the end, as it were, the results of painstaking experiments, and crucial discoveries, are meant for the benefit of society. The farmer whose concern is a happy, healthy, plentiful yield. The parent whose child's malady depends on a scientist's eureka moment. The manufacturer whose machines are becoming obsolete. That is why scientists MUST learn to communicate their work with clarity. Why are we doing this? What do we seek to achieve? When, predictably, will that be rolled out? How are we doing it? HOW is this going to be of benefit to society? Without which, unfortunately, the engine will keep firing but the power will never reach the wheels, and the car will never move. Scientists, here is a quote for you from Dr @CanisiusKana, The Executive Director of @aatfafrica , made during #ABBC2025.

One of our scientists' sworn duties, and which they never abandon come what may, is ensuring safety of new scientific innovations. In agricultural biotechnology especially, our forte, scientists work hard so that future generations have access to plenty of safe, nutritious food.






