 |
| Kim Sam Ryong, deputy president of the Academy of Agricultural Sciences in North Korea, looks into a feed bucket at one of UGAs poultry testing facilities as Nick Dale, a professor of poultry science, shows the North Korean delegation around the facility. Photo by Peter Frey |
North Koreans visit UGA, study agricultural research |
|
|
By Brad Haire
bhaire@uga.edu
Five representatives of the Academy of Agricultural Sciences in the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea spent two weeks last month learning about agricultural research from UGA specialists in Athens, Griffin and Tifton.
This is an historic event, says Ed Kanemasu, coordinator of international programs for UGAs College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. This is the first time the academy has sent representatives to the United States. Agriculture is a common ground. Everybody has to eat.
The North Korean delegation, through this and future visits, hopes to exchange advanced food-producing technologies and benefit their country, which has endured six years of famine because of natural disasters.
The North Koreans have food shortages, and the United States has the technology to help in the countrys effort to feed its people. In return, they have germ plasm that could benefit the United States, Kanemasu says.
The delegation arrived May 7. Asking questions and taking notes, they were shown poultry, horticultural, row crop, irrigation, genetic and other research by UGA scientists.
Kim Sam Ryong, deputy president of the academy, said through an interpreter that North Korea hopes to continue relations between the two institutions.
The University of Georgia is one of the biggest state universities in the United States, and it is very good in bioengineering and poultry, he said. Georgia has a lot of achievement in broiler production. Also, youve got pecan trees, which could be similar to [producing]
hazelnuts in Korea.
The North Korean group wants to develop hardy, nutritional food varieties. UGA potato research was a high priority.
They have an area where the sweet potato grows very well, says Stan Kays, a UGA horticulturist. Theyre interested in it as a viable field crop. President Kim Jong Il wants them to increase potato and sweet potato production.
Potatoes and sweet potatoes are hardy crops. They grow underground, produce high yields and are less vulnerable to sudden changes in weather, Kays says.
Kays has given tissue samples of a new UGA sweet potato to China and North Korea. The potato is easy to grow like a sweet potato, but doesnt have the sweet taste.
Scientists there can cross this breeding line with established local varieties and have the best of both worlds: a versatile, easy-to-grow crop, he says.
We especially enjoy the production of potatoes and sweet potatoes, Kim said. The Koreans should carry out what we call the Potato Revolution.
Last October, Kays and Kanemasu were part of a UGA delegation, led by CAES dean Gale Buchanan, invited to North Korea and hosted by the North Korean academy.
The conclusion of the discussions, Kanemasu says, was that if we work together, we can get much benefit for people of both countries.
They were our host when we were there, and we are hosting them here with the idea of trying to enhance their agricultural technology and also see an exchange of agricultural ideas to us.
|
|
|