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Heads Monsanto Wins, Tails We Lose; The Genetically Modified Food Gamble

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Published on Wednesday, March 19, 2008 by CommonDreams.org Heads Monsanto

Wins, Tails We Lose; The Genetically Modified Food Gamble

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/03/19/7769/

 

by Robert Weissman

 

There have been few experiments as reckless, overhyped and with as little

potential upside as the rapid rollout of genetically modified crops.

Last month, the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech

Applications (ISAAA), a pro-biotech nonprofit, released a report highlighting

the proliferation of genetically modified crops. According to ISAAA, biotech

crop area grew 12 percent, or 12. 3 million hectares, to reach 114. 3 million

hectares in 2007, the second highest area increase in the past five years.

For the biotech backers, this is cause to celebrate. They claim that biotech

helps farmers. They say it promises to reduce hunger and poverty in developing

countries.”If we are to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) of

cutting hunger and poverty in half by 2015,” says Clive James, ISAAA founder and

the author the just-released report, “biotech crops must play an even bigger

role in the next decade.”

In fact, existing genetically modified crops are hurting small farmers and

failing to deliver increased food supply — and posing enormous, largely unknown

risks to people and the planet.

For all of the industry hype around biotech products, virtually all planted

genetically modified seed is for only four products — soy, corn, cotton and

canola — with just two engineered traits. Most of the crops are engineered to be

resistant to glyphosate, an herbicide sold by Monsanto under the brand-name

Round-up (these biotech seeds are known as RoundUp-Ready). Others are engineered

to include a naturally occurring pesticide, Bt.

Most of the genetically modified crops in developing countries are soy, says

Bill Freese, science policy analyst at the Center for Food Safety and co-author

of “Who Benefits from GM Crops,” a report issued at the same time as ISAAA’s

release. These crops are exported to rich countries, primarily as animal feed.

They do absolutely nothing to supply food to the hungry.

As used in developing countries, biotech crops are shifting power away from

small, poor farmers desperately trying to eke out livelihoods and maintain their

land tenure.

Glyphosate-resistance is supposed to enable earlier and less frequent

spraying, but, concludes “Who Benefits from GM Crops,” these biotech seeds

“allow farmers to spray a particular herbicide more frequently and

indiscriminately without fear of damaging the crop.” This requires expenditures

beyond the means of small farmers — but reduces labor costs, a major benefit for

industrial farms.

ISAAA contends that Bt planting in India and China has substantially reduced

insecticide spraying, which it advances as the primary benefit of biotech crops.

Bt crops may offer initial reductions in required spraying, says Freese, but

Bt is only effective against some pests, meaning farmers may have to use

pesticides to prevent other insects from eating their crops. Focusing on a

district in Punjab, “Who Benefits from GM Crops” shows how secondary pest

problems have offset whatever gains Bt crops might offer.

Freese also notes that evidence is starting to come in to support longstanding

fears that genetically engineering the Bt trait into crops would give rise to

Bt-resistant pests.

The biotech seeds are themselves expensive, and must be purchased anew every

year. Industry leader Monsanto is infamous for suing farmers for the age-old

practice of saving seeds, and holds that it is illegal for farmers even to save

genetically engineered seeds that have blown onto their fields from neighboring

farms.”That has nothing to do with feeding the hungry,” or helping the poorest

of the poor, says Hope Shand, research director for the ETC Group, an ardent

biotech opponent. It is, to say the least, not exactly a farmer-friendly

approach.

Although the industry and its allies tout the benefits that biotech may yield

someday for the poor, “we have yet to see genetically modified food that is

cheaper, more nutritious or tastes better,” says Shand. “Biotech seeds have not

been shown to be scientifically or socially useful,” although they have been

useful for the profit-driven interests of Monsanto, she says.

Freese notes that the industry has been promising gains for the poor for a

decade and a half — but hasn’t delivered. Products in the pipeline won’t change

that, he says, with the industry focused on introducing new herbicide resistant

seeds.

The evidence on yields for the biotech crops is ambiguous, but there is good

reason to believe yields have actually dropped. ISAAA’s Clive James says that Bt

crops in India and China have improved yields somewhat. “Who Benefits from GM

Crops” carefully reviews this claim, and offers a convincing rebuttal. The

report emphasizes the multiple factors that affect yield, and notes that Bt and

Roundup-Ready seeds alike are not engineered to improve yield per se, just to

protect against certain predators or for resistance to herbicide spraying.

Beyond the social disaster of contributing to land concentration and

displacement of small farmers, a range of serious ecological and sustainability

problems with biotech crops is already emerging — even though the biotech crop

experiment remains quite new.

Strong evidence of pesticide resistance is rapidly accumulating, details “Who

Benefits from GM Crops,” meaning that farmers will have to spray more and more

chemicals to less and less effect. Pesticide use is rising rapidly in

biotech-heavy countries. In the heaviest user of biotech seeds — the United

States, which has half of all biotech seed planting — glyphosate-resistant weeds

are proliferating. Glyphosate use in the United States rose by 15 times from

1994 to 2005, according to “Who Benefits from GM Crops,” and use of other and

more toxic herbicides is rapidly rising. The U.S. experience likely foreshadows

what is to come for other countries more recently adopting biotech crops.

Seed diversity is dropping, as Monsanto and its allies aim to eliminate seed

saving, and development of new crop varieties is slowing. Contamination from

neighboring fields using genetically modified seeds can destroy farmers’ ability

to maintain biotech-free crops. Reliance on a narrow range of seed varieties

makes the food system very vulnerable, especially because of the visible

problems with the biotech seeds now in such widespread use.

For all the uncertainties about the long-term effects of biotech crops and

food, one might imagine that there were huge, identifiable short-term benefits.

But one would be wrong.

Instead, a narrowly based industry has managed to impose a risky technology

with short-term negatives and potentially dramatic downsides.

But while it is true, as ISAAA happily reports, that biotech planting is

rapidly growing, it remains heavily concentrated in just a few countries: the

United States, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, India and China.

Europe and most of the developing world continue to resist Monsanto’s seed

imperialism. The industry and its allies decry this stand as a senseless

response to fear-mongering. It actually reflects a rational assessment of

demonstrated costs and benefits — and an appreciation for real but incalculable

risks of toying with the very nature of nature.

Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor,

and director of Essential Action.

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