The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has spent nearly $6 billion on agricultural development, with a key focus on transforming African agriculture by transitioning farmers to patented seeds and fossil-fuel based fertilizers to grow staple crops for the global market. Leading experts in food security and hundreds of groups in Africa and around the world say the foundation’s market-based agricultural development strategies are aiding multinational corporations more than small farmers and communities in Africa, even as hunger and inequality worsen. This fact sheet links to reports, critiques and news articles describing these concerns. We will update it regularly.
Table of contents (drop links)
Most recent Gates Foundation food-related news
Opposition from African groups
UN Food Systems Summit controversy
Gates Foundation funding for agricultural development
Critiques of the Green Revolution for Africa
GMOs in the Global South
Gates Foundation’s media influence
More Gates Foundation food news
U.S. Right to Know reporting
Overview of critiques
The Gates Foundation’s core strategy to reduce hunger in Africa is to expand industrial agricultural practices in ways that increase production of commodity crops for the global market. The foundation says its goal is to “boost the yields and incomes of millions of small farmers in Africa… so they can lift themselves and their families out of hunger and poverty.”
The strategy is modeled on the “green revolution” that boosted production of staple crops in India. But critics say the strategy in India has left a legacy of inequity that has fueled farmer protests there. Several recent reports provide evidence that the Gates-led “green revolution” for Africa has failed to deliver on its promises. Despite billions of dollars in aid and government subsidies, hunger and malnutrition have worsened across sub-Saharan Africa. More than 40 million people in the region are at risk of increased hunger and poverty as countries grapple with multiple shocks from the pandemic and climate change.
“we write out of grave concern that the Gates Foundation’s support for the expansion of intensive industrial scale agriculture is deepening the humanitarian crisis.”
Against this backdrop, agribusinesses interests and private donors, including the Gates Foundation, are staging what critics describe as power plays to further solidify control over global agriculture policies at the 2021 UN Food Systems Summit. These include proposals to implement a new framework for food systems governance and centralize control over agricultural research centers. The International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems described the situation as “a high-stakes battle over different visions of what constitutes legitimate science and relevant knowledge for food systems” and “part of a broader battle over what food systems should look like and who should govern them.”
Hundreds of groups are planning protests and boycotts of the food summit because of the influence being wielded by financiers and corporations pushing to expand high-input industrial agriculture, especially in Africa. These groups and leading experts on food security and nutrition say there is an urgent need to change course, and support diverse agroecological farming systems that promote biodiversity instead of monocultures and include political and economic reforms that address inequity and social divisions.
Most recent Gates Foundation food-related news
- The UN Summit on Food Systems: The Critique, by Marion Nestle, Food Politics, July 14, 2021.
- New UN hunger report spotlights controversial UN Food Systems Summit, USRTK, July 14, 2021.
- An ‘IPCC for Food’? How the UN Food Systems Summit is being used to advance a problematic new science-policy agenda, International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems, Briefing paper, July 7, 2021
- Bill Gates: Stop Telling Africans What Kind of Agriculture Africans Need, by Million Belay and Bridget Mugambe. Scientific American, July 6, 2021
- Throwing good money after bad: Failing Green Revolution program for Africa readies billion-dollar fund drive, by Timothy Wise. Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, July 2, 2021
- Weaponizing Science in Global Food Policy, by Maya Montenegro, Matthew Canfield and Alastair Iles. Inter Press Service, June 25, 2021
- How the Gates Foundation is driving the food system, in the wrong direction, analysis of Gates Foundation agricultural development funding, GRAIN research group, June 17, 2021
- Ghana’s farmers aren’t all seeing the fruits of a Green Revolution, by James Boafo and Kristen Lyons. The Conversation, June 14, 2021.
- Falsches Versprechen für Afrikas Bauern (Failed agricultural projects, False promise for Africa’s farmers). Der Spiegel, June 9, 2021 and report from Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung.
- McDonald’s french fries, carrots, onions: all of the foods that come from Bill Gates farmland, by April Glaser. NBC News, June 8, 2021
- Peoples’ Counter-Mobilization to Transform Corporate Food Systems, Civil Society and Indigenous Peoples’ Mechanism for relations with the UN Committee on World Food Security, May 20, 2021
- Bill Gates’ radical menu for food systems: ultra-processed foods, patents and monocrops, by Stacy Malkan. U.S. Right to Know, May 26, 2021
Opposition from African groups
Food sovereignty and civil society groups, faith leaders, and farmer, labor and environmental organizations across Africa have raised concerns for many years about Gates Foundation’s agricultural development strategies for Africa, and the foundation’s sway over public spending and government policies.
“They talk about transforming African agriculture but what they are doing is creating a market for themselves.”
In dozens of reports since 2007, the South Africa-based African Centre for Biodiversity has documented numerous problems with the Gates-led “green revolution” for Africa. These include subsidy deals, growing corporate control of the seed sector, expanding use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, escalation to more toxic pesticides as pests develop resistance to genetically modified (GMO) seeds, soil degradation, loss of biodiversity and negative impacts on small farmers. The group and many others are calling for a transition to agroecological practices and policies that allow food sovereignty.
African groups have also called out the neocolonial dynamics of Gates Foundation funding for Africa. These critics say the foundation and other private donors, investors, agribusiness corporations and Western governments are pushing a false narrative that Africa’s farmers need to buy patented seeds and agrichemicals developed by Western corporations in order to produce enough food. They say African farmers and communities should decide how to shape Africa’s food systems.
Resources and statements from African groups
- Bill Gates: Stop Telling Africans What Kind of Agriculture Africans Need, by Million Belay and Bridget Mugambe. Scientific American, July 6, 2021
- African Civil Society Refuses To Engage With UN Food Systems Summit Without Radical Change, Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa, May 3, 2021. See also Dr. Agnes Kalibata response and AFSA response June 18, 2021
- Southern African civil society responds to false claims about GM benefits to food and nutrition security, African Centre for Biodiversity statement, June 18, 2021
- Seed is Power video series, Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa videos describe African farmers’ concerns about patented hybrid and GMO seeds and the importance of seed sovereignty, June 2021
- Harmonisation of seed laws in Africa, Regional and continental integration under the auspices of the African Continental Seed Harmonisation initiative and the African Continental Free Trade Area, African Centre for Biodiversity, May 17, 2021
- Bayer breathing life into Gates’ failed GM drought tolerant maize, African Centre for Biodiversity briefing paper, April 28, 2021
- African Faith Communities Call On Gates Foundation, “Stop Pushing Industrial Agriculture” Southern African Faith Communities’ Environment Institute, press release March 10, 2021.
- African Center for Biodiversity Reaction to the Regional Dialogue on African Food Systems, March 4, 2021
- African Organizations Demand Answers from AGRA, BIBA Kenya, PELUM Zambia, HOMEF Nigeria, September 7, 2020
- Groups and individuals call on African governments to withdraw from AGRA, Webinar with HOMEF, African Faith and Justice Network, Navdanya International, August 12, 2020
- Africa Says “I Can’t Breathe”: An African Civil Society Perspective on Systemic Racism, by Million Belay. Common Dreams, June 10, 2020
- Seeds Of Neo-Colonialism: Why the GMO Promoters Get It So Wrong About Africa, Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa, May 2018
Recent reporting on African food systems
- Whose seeds are they anyway? Peasants’ call for common ownership, by Michelle Langrand, Geneva Solutions, July 9, 2021
- Tracing the history of farming across Africa gives clues to low production outputs, by Henning Bjornlund, André F. Van Rooyen and Vibeke Bjornlund, The Conversation, July 6, 2021
- Synthetic Pesticide Use in Africa: Impact on People, Animals, and the Environment, edited by Charles Wilson, Don Huger, CRC Press, July 2021
- How Biotechnologies are Shaping Kenya’s Food Ecosystem, by Daniel Maingi. The Elephant, May 7, 2021
- A locust plague hit East Africa. The pesticide solution may have dire consequences. by Tristan McConnell, National Geographic, March 24, 2021
- The next neocolonial gold rush? African food systems are the ‘new oil,’ UN documents say, by Stacy Malkan. U.S. Right to Know, March 9, 2021
- Faiths institute asks Gates Foundation to change tactics in Africa by Fredrick Nzwili, Catholic News Service, February 2021
UN Food Systems Summit controversy
The World Economic Forum, the Gates Foundation and other private donors, including the Rockefeller Foundation, are key players influencing the controversial 2021 UN Food Systems Summit. Hundreds of groups are protesting and boycotting the Summit because of the dominant role of corporate agribusiness and agenda many critics say will further entrench a harmful industrial agribusiness model.
“A misguided technological revolution is about to sweep through food systems, but civil society and social movements can stop it in its tracks.”
Nick Jacobs, IPES-Food, Common Dreams
The summit is led by Special Envoy Agnes Kalibata, president of the Gates Foundation-funded Alliance for a Green Revolution for Africa (AGRA). Her chief of staff is Adam Gerstenmier, formerly of AGRA and the Gates Foundation. UN insiders have harshly criticized the summit process, saying its leaders have ignored human rights, marginalized civil society and restructured the UN process to shift power away from the UN Committee on World Food Security into the hands of a small set of private sector actors.
“Few people will dispute that global food systems need transformation, but this UNFSS is instead an effort by a powerful alliance of multinational corporations, philanthropies, and export-oriented countries to subvert multilateral institutions of food governance,” IPES-Food wrote in a June 3 Tweet thread.
Statements critiquing the food summit
- African Civil Society Refuses To Engage With UN Food Systems Summit Without Radical Change, Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa, May 3, 2021. See also Dr. Agnes Kalibata response and AFSA response, June 18, 2021
- People’s movement to counter UN summit; call to reclaim food systems from corporate control, press release and media kit, Global People’s Summit on Food Systems, June 5, 2021
- Civil Society and Indigenous Peoples’ Mechanism letter to the CFS Chair on Food Systems Summit, CSM for relations with the UN Committee on World Food Security, March 23, 2021
- Scientists Boycott the 2021 UN Food Systems Summit, Agroecology Research-Action Collective and letter in Spanish, April 15, 2021
- 2021 UN Food Systems Summit sounds like a good thing, but…, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), February 10, 2021
- Open letter by the UN Food Rapporteur to Agnes Kalibata Special Envoy of the UN Secretary-General, by Michael Fakhri, Special Rapporteur on the right to food, January 13, 2021.
- Video interviews: Professor Michael Fakhri’s struggle with the summit leadership and What’s at stake at UNFSS
- New Report: A Summit Under Siege! Position Paper on UN Food Systems Summit 2021, Conner Nakamura. Community Alliance for Global Justice, January 4, 2021
- Position Paper: “A Summit Under Siege” | Corporate control of 2021 UN Food Summit endangers food sovereignty, La Via Campesina, December 10, 2020
- The Man Behind the Curtain: The Gates Foundation’s influence on the UN Food Systems Summit, Community Alliance for Global Justice report, August 2020
- Via Campesina denounces UN Special Envoy for the UN Food Systems Summit for diminishing peasants and their rights, La Via Campesina, February 26, 2020
- Call to Revoke AGRA’s Agnes Kalibata as Special Envoy to 2021 UN Food Systems Summit, Oakland Institute and 175 organizations, February 10, 2020
Reports about food systems governance and transformation
- An ‘IPCC for food? How the UN Food Systems Summit is being used to advance a problematic new science-policy agenda, International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems briefing paper, July 7, 2021
- A unifying framework for food systems transformation: A call for governments, private companies & civil society to adopt 13 key principles, by IPES Food, IFOAM, Agroecology Europe, FiBL, Regeneration International, July 2021
- CONNECTING THE DOTS: Policy Innovations for Food Systems Transformation in Africa, A Malabo Montpellier Panel Report, July 2021
- UN Food Systems Summit 2021: Dismantling Democracy and Resetting Corporate Control of Food Systems, by Matthew Canfield, Molly Anderson, Philip McMichael, Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems. April 13, 2021
- A Long Food Movement: Transforming Food Systems by 2045, by IPES-Food and ETC Group, March 30, 2021.
- This food crisis is different: COVID-19 and the fragility of the neoliberal food security order, by Jennifer Clapp and William Moseley, the Journal of Peasant Studies, October 2020
- A call for food system change, by Marion Nestle, The Lancet, May 30, 2020
- The Next Agribusiness Takeover: Multilateral Food Agencies, ETC Group, February 2020
- Agroecological and other innovative approaches for sustainable agriculture and food systems that enhance food security and nutrition, High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition for the UN FAO, 2019
- United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas, resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council, September, 28 2018
- Agriculture at a crossroads: International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development, published by United Nations Environment Program, 2009
- Ten years after the IAASTD report – still business as usual? Co-published by Benny Haerlin and Hans R. Herren, “with 31 contributions from 40 experts who criticize the current dominating food systems and provide evidence “that a real paradigm shift has emerged and that change is happening all over the globe.”
News coverage and perspectives on food summit
- The UN Summit on Food Systems: The Critique, by Marion Nestle, Food Politics, July 14, 2021.
- New UN hunger report spotlights controversial UN Food Systems Summit, U.S. Right to Know, July 14, 2021.
- Weaponizing Science in Global Food Policy, by Maya Montenegro, Matthew Canfield and Alastair Iles. Inter Press Service, June 25, 2021
- Agroecology grassroots solutions to a global crises, Agroecology Fund video, produced by Rucha Chitnis, June 11, 2021
- Opinion: Why reinvent the wheel on food security and nutrition? By Jennifer Clapp, Martin Cole, Thanawat Tiensin. Devex, May 21, 2021
- Transforming food systems is within reach, Agnes Kalibata. Nature Food, May 20, 2021
- Struggle for the Future of Food, by Jomo Kwame Sundaram, IPS News, May 10, 2021
- We Should All Be Worried About The United Nations Food Systems Summit, by A Growing Culture. Medium, May 1, 2021
- Is Agroecology Being Co-Opted by Big Ag? by Lisa Held. Civil Eats. April 20, 2021
- The world needs a food movement based on agroecology and equity, by Pat Mooney. Mongabay, April 21, 2021
- Six Months to Prevent a Hostile Takeover of Food Systems, and 25 Years to Transform Them, by Nick Jacobs. Common Dreams April 7, 2021
- UN Food Systems Summit: How Not to Respond to the Urgency of Reform, by Michael Fakri, Hilal Elver, Olivier De Schutter. IPS News, March 22, 2021
- The UN food systems summit will consider all stakeholders’ interests, by Agnes Kalibata. The Guardian, March 9, 2021
- Farmers and rights groups boycott food summit over big business links. The Guardian, March 4, 2021
- Why we’re tracking Bill Gates plans to remake our food systems, by Stacy Malkan. U.S. Right to Know, February 26, 2021.
- UN Rapporteur to Agnes Kalibata: Food Systems Summit needs human rights at its core, by Lise Colyer. Quota, January 14, 2021
- UN under fire over choice of ‘corporate puppet’ as envoy at key food summit, Saeed Kamali Dehghan and Kaamil Ahmed, The Guardian, March 12, 2020
How the Gates Foundation funds agricultural development
The Gates Foundation has spent nearly $6 billion on agricultural development programs, with a primary focus on transforming African food systems. Several groups have analyzed the foundation’s agricultural development funding. The following themes emerge from that research.
Funding researchers and groups in the North, not farmers in Africa. A June 2021 analysis of 1,130 Gates Foundation grants for agriculture since 2003 found the grants are “heavily skewed to technologies developed by research centres and corporations in the North for poor farmers in the South, completely ignoring the knowledge, technologies and biodiversity that these farmers already possess,” according to the GRAIN research group. Many of the grants were given to “groups that lobby on behalf of industrial farming and undermine alternatives,” GRAIN wrote.
Supporting industrial agriculture: As many as 85% of Gates Foundation-funded agricultural research projects for Africa “were limited to supporting industrial agriculture and/or increasing its efficiency via targeted approaches,” according to a 2020 report by IPES-Food. The foundation “looks for quick, tangible returns on investment, and thus favours targeted, technological solutions.” Just 3% of Gates Foundation projects included elements of agroecological redesign.
The largest recipient of Gates agricultural grants is CGIAR (formerly the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research), the world’s largest global agricultural research network. The Gates Foundation has donated over $1.3 billion to the influential research centers. In a July 2020 letter, IPES-Food raised concerns about Gates Foundation’s involvement in a “coercive” process to centralize control of the CGIAR research network into “One CGIAR” with a centralized board and new agenda setting powers. The reforms on the table “risk exacerbating power imbalances in global agricultural development,” IPES said.
Expanding markets for commercial seeds and fertilizer: The second largest single recipient of Gates grant funding for agriculture is the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) with $638 million in grants to date. AGRA’s primary focus is increasing farmers’ access to commercial seeds and fertilizers that AGRA said would boost yields and lift small farmers out of poverty. This “green revolution” technology package of commercial seeds and agrichemicals is further supported by about $1 billion per year in subsidies from African governments, but evidence shows these interventions have not delivered the promised boost in yields or incomes (see “green revolution” section below).
Removing barriers to agribusiness expansion: The Gates Foundation is among the five top donors (along with the US, UK, Danish, and Dutch governments) of the World Bank’s Enabling the Business of Agriculture (EBA) program that guides policymaking for pro-business reforms in the agriculture sector. The Oakland Institute and GRAIN research group have produced several reports about efforts by the World Bank and its funders to strengthen private property and intellectual property rights, and promote large-scale land acquisitions that benefit private actors.
Reports on Gates Foundation funding and influence
- How the Gates Foundation is driving the food system in the wrong direction, GRAIN research group, June 17, 2021.
- Gates to a Global Empire over Seed, Food, Health, Knowledge …and the Earth, Navdanya International reports from 20 authors from a broad range of groups describing problematic aspects of Gates’ food and agriculture work, October 2020.
- Money Flows: What Is Holding Back Investment In Agroecological Research For Africa?, International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems report, April 2020.
- ‘One CGIAR’ with two tiers of influence? Open letter from IPES-Food on the plan to centralize CGIAR network, July 2020
- Our Land Our Business Campaign, 280 civil society groups demand an end to the World Bank ranking programs.
- The Highest Bidder Takes It All: The World Bank’s Scheme to Privatize the Commons, Oakland Institute, January 24, 2019
- Down on the Seed: The World Bank Enables Corporate Takeover of Seed, Oakland Institute, January 2017
- The Unholy Alliance, Five Western Donors Shape a Pro-Corporate Agenda for African Agriculture, Oakland Institute, May 24, 2016
- Gates Foundation “dangerously skewing” development agenda according to new report, Global Justice Now, January 2016
- Reports about land grabs, GRAIN, 2008 to 2021.
Gates Foundation perspectives
- Gates Foundation agricultural development program page
- How African farmers are adapting to climate change, by Laura Birx, Gates Foundation, March 19, 2021
- Global Coalition Promises More than $650 Million to Accelerate CGIAR Efforts to Help 300 Million Smallholder Farmers Adapt to Climate Change, CGIAR press release, September 23, 2019
- Helping Poor Farmers, Changes Needed to Feed 1 Billion Hungry, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 2012
- A Green Revolution for Africa? by David Rieff, New York Times Magazine, October 10, 2008
Critiques of the “Green Revolution” for Africa
The Gates Foundation’s flagship program for changing African agriculture is the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA). The group works to encourage farmers to use hybrid seeds, fossil-fuel based fertilizers and agrichemicals to grow staple crops for the global market, with the goal of boosting yields and raising farmer incomes. AGRA promised to double yields and incomes for 30 million farming households by 2020. The deadline has passed (and the language since removed from AGRA’s website) with no comprehensive reporting on progress.
Independent assessments by Tufts Global Development and Environment Institute and African and German groups provide evidence that AGRA has not delivered significant yield or income gains for small farmers while hunger has grown by 30% across AGRA’s target countries. AGRA disagreed with the research but has not released data evaluating its results for over 15 years.
From the start, food policy experts predicted the green revolution for Africa would not solve hunger and poverty, because it ignored structural inequalities and the harsh lessons of the first green revolution in India. Over the past year, farmers in India have launched protests to oppose corporate control of their food systems and deepening inequality.
Independent reports
- The Rhetoric and Farmers’ Lived Realities of the Green Revolution in Africa: Case Study of the Brong Ahafo Region in Ghana, by James Boafo and Kristen Lyons. Journal of Asian and African Studies, May 2021
- False Promises: The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, report by Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, BIBA Kenya, , TABIO, Forum on Environment and Development, INKOTA, IRPAD, FIAN Germany, Brot für die Welt, PELUM, TOAM, Tufts GDAE, July 2020.
- Update July 2021: Interne Gutachten bestätigen: Die Allianz für eine Grüne Revolution ist gescheitert. Analyse der Anfang des Jahres 2021 veröffentlichten AGRA-eigenen Evaluierungen aus den Jahren 2019/2020
- Failing Africa’s Farmers: An Impact Assessment of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, by Timothy A. Wise, Tufts Global Development and Environment Institute, July 2020
- Update, February 2021: AGRA Update: Withheld internal documents reveal no progress for Africa’s farmers, by Timothy Wise, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, February 25, 2021
- Micro(soft) managing a ‘green revolution’ for Africa: The new donor culture and international agricultural development, by Rachel Schurman, World Development, October 2018
AGRA perspectives and reports
News coverage and critical perspectives
- Throwing good money after bad: Failing Green Revolution program readies billion-dollar fund drive, by Timothy Wise. Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, July 2, 2021
- Ghana’s farmers aren’t all seeing the fruits of a Green Revolution, by James Boafo and Kristen Lyons. The Conversation, June 14, 2021.
- Farm Protests in India are Writing the Green Revolution’s Obituary, by Aniket Aga. Scientific American, January 24, 2021
- Bill Gates’s Foundation Is Leading a Green Counterrevolution in Africa, by Jan Urhahn, Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung. Jacobin magazine, December 2020
- How the Green Revolution Is Harming Africa, by Jayati Ghosh, chair of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University.International Political Sociology journal, October 14, 2020
- “It’s a Vicious Cycle,” Mamadou Goïta of IRPAD on the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, 2020
- Pressure builds on Gates Foundation AGRA for accountability, by Timothy A. Wise, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, October 13, 2020
- Africa at the Crossroads: Time to Abandon Failing Green Revolution, by Million Belay and Timothy A Wise. IPS News, September 23, 2020
- Address Malnutrition with Food Insecurity, by Jomo Kwame Sundaram, economist, former Assistant Secretary General for Economic Development in the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs. IPS News, August 2020
- Africa food organization ‘fails to deliver on promise to double yields.’ SciDev, August 24, 2020
- Has Africa’s green revolution failed?, Deutsche Welle, August 15, 2020
- Gates ‘Failing Green Revolution in Africa’, by Stacy Malkan. The Ecologist, August 14, 2020
- US Groups Invest Billions in Industrial Ag in Africa. Experts Say It’s not Ending Hunger or Helping Farmers.” Civil Eats, August 11, 2020
- Ten Reasons Why the Green Revolution Will Not Solve Poverty and Hunger in Africa, by Eric Holt-Giménez, Miguel Altieri and Peter Rosset. Food First. October 1, 2006
GMOs in the Global South
Bill Gates has said genetically engineered crops will “end starvation in Africa,” and he invests heavily in GMO research and development. But African governments, civil society and farmer organizations have long resisted GMO crops. They cite many concerns, including corporate control of seed stock, loss of traditional crops and local seed varieties, higher cost of GMO seeds, increased use of herbicides associated with GMO crops, the limitations of GMO crops to perform in complex environments, and doubts the crops will ever live up to the promotional hype.
“The empirical record of GM crops for poor small farmers in the Global South has not lived up to expectations.”
Brian Dowd-Uribe, USFCA
The two largest introductions of GMO crops for small farmers in the Global South — Bt cotton crops in Burkina Faso and India — have been problematic for small farmers. Burkina Faso abandoned its genetically modified Bt cotton experiment after the seeds failed to deliver the same quality as the homegrown variety. In India, 20 years of data on Bt cotton found no yield increase associated with the crops, and determined that farmers are now spending more on pesticides than before the introduction of Bt due in part to insect resistance.
In South Africa, most of the country’s staple maize food crop is genetically modified to resist glyphosate-based Roundup herbicides. The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, classifies glyphosate as a probable human carcinogen, and many local groups have raised health concerns about the prevalent use of the herbicides.
Reports and articles about GMOs in the Global South
- Bayer breathing life into Gates’ failed GM drought tolerant maize, by Sabrina Masinjila and Rutendo Zendah, African Centre for Biodiversity, April 28, 2021
- Knowledge politics and the Bt cotton success narrative in Burkina Faso, by Jessie Luna and Brian Dowd-Uribe. World Development, December 2020
- Does Kenya Need GMO Cassava? Ask the World Food Prize-winner Who Saved Africa’s Cassava, by Timothy Wise. Food Tank, October 2020
- How power shaped the ‘success story’ of genetically modified cotton in Burkina Faso, by Brian Dowd-Uribe. The Conversation, August 30, 2020
- Long-term impacts of Bt cotton in India, by K.R. Kranthi and Glenn Davis Stone, Nature Plants, October 2020
- Gates to a Global Empire over Seed, Food, Health, Knowledge …and the Earth, Navdanya International reports from 20 authors from a broad range of groups describing problematic aspects of Gates’ food and agriculture work, October 2020.
- How the “success story” of genetically modified cotton in Burkina Faso fell apart, by Jessie Luna and Brian Dows-Uribe. Quartz Africa, September 4, 2020
- Push back against risky and unsafe RNAi GM cassava cultivation in Kenya, African Centre for Biodiversity, September 2, 2020
- GMOs in South Africa 23 years on: failures, biodiversity loss and escalating hunger, African Centre for Biodiversity, August 3, 2020
- “We Are Not Starving:” Challenging Genetically Modified Seeds and Development in Ghana, by Joeva Rock, PhD, Agriculture, Food and Environment, 2018
- Feeding East Africa – locals skeptical of GM crops, Deutsche Welle, January 2, 2018
- Forcing the Farm: How Gene Drive Organisms Could Entrench Industrial Agriculture and Threaten Food Sovereignty, ETC Group, October 16, 2018
- Bound to fail: The flawed scientific foundations of agricultural genetic engineering by Michael Antoniou, PhD, Head of the Gene Expression and Therapy Group, King’s College London School of Medicine; GM Watch, November 21, 2018
- How Monsanto’s GM cotton sowed trouble in Africa, by Joe Bavier. Reuters, December 8, 2017
- Debate over glyphosate rages in South Africa, DW, by Leah Albrect, January 27, 2017
- Manipulate and mislead: How GMOs are infiltrating Africa, by Haidee Swanby, Mariann Bassey Orovwuje. Common Dreams, February 23, 2015
- Who benefits from GM crops? The expansion of agribusiness interests in Africa through biosafety policy. Friends of the Earth International, February 2015
- What Bill Gates gets wrong on GE, every time, Pesticide Action Network, 2012
- The corporate shaping of GM crops as a technology for the poor, by Dominic Glover. Journal of Peasant Studies, January 2010
- New Green Revolution for Africa: Trojan Horse for GMOs, African Centre for Biodiversity, 2007
Statements from NGOs and scientists
Gates influence on media and food narratives
“News about (Bill) Gates these days is often filtered through the perspectives of the many academics, nonprofits, and think tanks that Gates funds. Sometimes it is delivered to readers by newsrooms with financial ties to the foundation,” reported Tim Schwab in Columbia Journalism Review. He documents more than $250 million in Gates grants to a variety of top news outlets.
“paid Cornell Alliance for Science fellows — under the guise of scientific expertise — launched vicious attacks.”
Fern Holland, Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action, Cornell Daily Sun
The Gates Foundation also funds many groups that work to shape public views on agriculture. One example is the Cornell Alliance for Science, a communications campaign based at Cornell University, launched with a Gates Foundation grant in 2014 to “depolarize the charged debate” around GMOs.” The group trains global fellows, particularly in Africa, to promote GMOs in their home countries. Cornell Alliance for Science affiliates were also active in opposing pesticide regulations in Hawaii. Gates Foundation has donated $22 million to the group.
Cornell Alliance for Science critiques
- Bill Gates: Stop Telling Africans What Kind of Agriculture Africans Need, by Million Belay and Bridget Mugambe. Scientific American, July 6, 2021
- Gates Foundation doubles down on misinformation as African groups call for agroecology, by Stacy Malkan, U.S. Right to Know, September 30, 2020
- Experts in agroecology withdraw from Cornell Alliance for Science Agroecology Webinar, citing bias, Community Alliance for Global Justice, September 30, 2020
- Mark Lynas’ (Cornell Alliance for Science) inaccurate, deceptive promotions for the agrichemical agenda, by Stacy Malkan. U.S. Right to Know, August 8, 2020
- Messengers of Gates’ Agenda: A Case Study of the Cornell Alliance for Science Global Leadership Fellows Program, Community Alliance for Global Justice, August 7, 2020
- Students Should Continue to Question the Ethics of the Cornell Alliance for Science, by Fern Holland, Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action. The Cornell Daily Sun, November 19, 2019
- Mark Lynas slammed for exploiting African farmers’ images to promote GMOs, African Centre for Biodiversity press release, 2018
- Mark Lynas’ unauthorized use of farmer’s images in misleading and unethical tactics to promote GM crops in Tanzania, report by Eugenio Tisselli, PhD, and Angelika Hilbeck, PhD, 2018
- Gates Foundation Grants Additional $6.4 million to Cornell’s Controversial Alliance for Science, Independent Science News, November 1, 2017
Reporting on Gates’ media influence
- Journalism’s Gates Keepers, by Timothy Schwab. Columbia Journalism Review, August 21, 2020
- ‘When money is offered, we listen’: foundation funding and nonprofit journalism, by Jacob Nelson and Patrick Ferrucci. Columbia Journalism Review, January 10, 2020
- The media loves the Gates Foundation. These experts are more skeptical, by Julia Belluz. Vox, 2015
- Does Gates funding of media taint objectivity? Seattle Times, 2011
- The Web Grows Wider; Gates Foundation partnerships with the Guardian and ABC News further complicate global health coverage, by Robert Fortner. Columbia Journalism Review, October 8, 2010
- How Ray Suarez Really Caught the Global Health Bug: The Gates Foundation, global health, and the media, by Robert Fortner. Columbia Journalism Review, October 7, 2010
- Not many speak their mind to Gates Foundation, by Sandi Doughton. Seattle Times, 2008
More Gates Foundation news
- Bill Gates Can Remove Melinda French Gates From Foundation in Two Years, by Nicholas Kulish, New York Times, July 7, 2021
- Warren Buffett’s Exit From the Gates Foundation Clouds Its Future, by Michael J. de la Merced and Nicholas Kulish, New York Times, June 23, 2021
- McDonald’s french fries, carrots, onions: all of the foods that come from Bill Gates farmland, by April Glaser. NBC News, June 8, 2021
- Despite the Headlines, the Gates Foundation Has Evaded Scrutiny, by Tim Schwab. The Nation, June 7, 2021
- The Big Stakes in the Gates Divorce, By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Jason Karaian, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni. New York Times, May 4, 2021
- Bill Gates, Climate Warrior. And Super Emitter, by Tim Schwab. The Nation, February 16, 2021
- The Gates Foundation: Philanthropy or Power Grabbing? by Marion Nestle, Food Politics, January 20, 2021
- Bill Gates: America’s Top Farmland Owner, by Eric O’Keefe, The Land Report,
- Bill Gates Gives to the Rich (Including Himself), by Tim Schwab. The Nation, Marcy 17, 2020
- Dark cloud over good works of Gates Foundation, by Charles Piller, Edmund Sanders and Robyn Dixon. Los Angeles Times, January 7, 2007
- See also LA Times story gallery for more reporting based on 18-month investigation of the Gates Foundation in 2007.
Reporting by U.S. Right to Know
- New hunger report spotlights controversial UN Food Systems Summit, by Stacy Malkan, July 14, 2021.
- Bill Gates’ radical menu for food systems: ultra-processed foods, patents and monocrops, by Stacy Malkan. May 26, 2021
- The next neocolonial gold rush? African food systems are the ‘new oil,’ UN documents say, by Stacy Malkan. March 9, 2021.
- Why we’re tracking Bill Gates’ plans to remake our food systems, by Stacy Malkan. February 26, 2021
- Bill Gates’ plans to remake food systems will harm the climate, by Stacy Malkan. February 25, 2021
- Gates Foundation doubles down on misinformation campaign at Cornell as African leaders call for agroecology, by Stacy Malkan. September 30, 2020
- Gates ‘failing green revolution in Africa’ by Stacy Malkan. The Ecologist, August 14, 2020
- Bill Gates Is on a Mission to Sell GMOs to Africa, but He’s Not Telling the Whole Truth, by Stacy Malkan. Alternet, March 22, 2016
- Why is Cornell University hosting a GMO propaganda campaign?, by Stacy Malkan. The Ecologist, January 22, 2016
Follow our Bill Gates Food Tracker for more Gates Foundation-related reporting and sign up here for email updates. You can make a tax-deductible donation here to support the U.S. Right to Know investigations.
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