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Bt cotton cultivation to officially start next year in Pakistan

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Faisalabad, Pakistan
July 15, 2009

Source: Pakistan Biotechnology Information Center (PABIC)

The cultivation of Bt cotton would start officially from next year, which would revolutionise agriculture and the textile sector in Pakistan, said Mohammad Farooq Saeed Khan, Federal Minister for Textile Industry.

Addressing a function to distribute certificates among the participants of 'Women Workers Training Programme', organised by the Ministry of Textile Industry, in collaboration with the International Labour Organisation (ILO), he said that the textile sector had been facing acute crisis for the last five years because of failure of the previous government to upgrade and enable the sector to effectively face the challenges of WTO and post-quota regime. He said the government has taken steps to reorganise the sector on modern scientific lines.

"We are looking at the whole textile chain right from raw cotton to export of value-added garments," he said, and added that people have started sowing Bt cotton on their own this year. However, from next year, Bt cotton would be sown officially as the government has made arrangements with an American firm to provide quality and certified seeds. This decision would not only increase cotton production but would also play an instrumental role in getting rid of rural poverty, he added.

The minister said that Pakistan is the fourth major cotton producing country in the world. India switched to Bt cotton last year and doubled its yield, "but we failed to avail of potential of Bt cotton." He said that cultivation of Bt cotton would also have positive impact "on our socio-economic condition" by involving female workers in the national mainstream.

He stressed the need for expeditious value-addition in the textile chain. Quoting the example of Bangladesh, he said that it is a non-cotton producing country, yet it is earning more foreign exchange as compared to Pakistan only because of value-addition. He said the government would encourage private sector to undertake measures for value-addition. "We are implementing a number of projects for training of skilled manpower with focus on female workers," he said, and added that special courses have been started for training female workers in collaboration with international organisations.

Aamir Amin, Export Development Plan Implementation Unit (EDBIU) Director, underlined importance of skilled manpower and said that 300 female workers were trained in first phase while another 50 have been trained during its second phase. Muhammad Latif, Chairman of Chenab Group of Industries, was also present.

 

 

 

 

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