Milan (AFP) - Israel wants to use its cutting-edge agricultural technology to improve food production -- and win friends -- across Africa, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday.
Visiting Israel's crop-themed pavilion at the World Expo in Milan, Netanyahu said cooperation with Italy in Africa would be top of his agenda at talks with his Italian counterpart Matteo Renzi in Florence on Saturday.
The Israeli premier, who is on his first major overseas trip since being re-elected in June, said Israel's pioneering role in areas such as drip-irrigation, water recycling and desalination made it perfectly equipped to help bolster food security in Africa and elsewhere.
"We have ten times the population we had when the state was founded 67 years ago, and half the rainfall, yet we have no water problems because we were able to solve this with all these techniques," he said.
"Now we are prepared - and are already doing our share to take this information to people around the world so they can have water, they can have crops, they can have cows that produce more milk and many other things that offer betterment for mankind."
He added: "Italy and Israel are today cooperating in one African country (Senegal) to better their agriculture.
"Why one? Why not twenty, why not thirty? If we pool our resources, our knowledge, our technology we can help many, many countries in Africa to not only better agriculture and to better life (sic)."
In the section of his statement in Hebrew, Netanyahu was more explicit about the diplomatic pay-off Israel could expect for such aid.
"People today around the world have a better quality of life thanks to Israeli technology and innovation.
"This is much stronger than any boycott."
- Vertical field -
Netanyahu was speaking in front of a giant "vertical field" of wheat, rice and corn that has helped to make Israel's pavilion one of the top draws at the six-month long world fair.
The structure, which is 12 metres tall and 70 metres long is intended to showcase Israeli expertise in the drip-irrigation technology that has enabled the cultivation of crops in arid areas around the world after being first developed on a kibbutz in the Negev desert.
The innovative 'standing-up' field was developed specially for the Expo but pavilion spokesman Menachem Gantz said it is hoped the design could serve as a model for architects seeking to create green spaces in tight urban areas.
The field is accompanied by a walk-through video exhibition outlining Israel's role in agricultural innovation, from Zionist agronomist's Aaron Aaronsohn's 1906 discovery of "the mother of wheat" on Mount Hermon to the development of commercially viable cherry tomatoes in the 1990s.
According to Gantz, nearly one million people have visited the exhibition since it opened on May 1.
"The theme of the Expo is 'Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life,' and we have represented that," Gantz said. "These kind of drip-drip systems enable crops to be grown with 70 percent less water than traditional irrigation takes and, for rice, the precision of the watering means the yields are twice as high.
"Most people now see Israel as a high-tech country but that culture has it roots in the way we had to innovate to get as much as we could from the land."
After his tour of the Israeli pavilion, Netanyahu was scheduled to take in those of Italy, the United States and China.
After that he has no official engagements until his Saturday evening meeting with Renzi.
The Israeli leader is due next month to visit London, where a petition has been launched urging his arrest for alleged Israeli war crimes during the 51-day offensive by Israeli forces in Gaza last year.