GMO |
Genetic
modification of crops through natural evolution or artificial
crossbreeding has been happening for millennia, giving rise to more
productive or resilient crop species. Thus, the term 'genetic
engineering' more accurately refers to the artificial introduction of
genetic material to produce new GE varieties.
Trans-Atlantic divide
A report by the
United States National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine -
picked up by the New York Times - found that US GE crop yield gains have
slowed over the years, leaving no significant advantage in yield gains
compared to non-GE plant varieties. Over two decades ago, Western Europe
largely rejected GE crops while North America - the United States and
then Canada - embraced them. More than twenty years later, US crop yield
gains are not significantly higher than in Western Europe.
Since the adoption
of GE crops, US use of herbicides has increased. In the US, decreasing
use of some herbicides has involved large increases in the use of
glyphosate, a key ingredient in herbicides used for GE crop cultivation.
This is in contrast to France, which bans GE crop cultivation, where
overall use of herbicides has been reduced due to EU efforts.
Glyphosate-resistant
GE crops survive herbicide spraying while killing non-resistant weeds.
However, rising weed resistance to glyphosate has led to the application
of larger doses. For example, although land planted with GE soybeans
has grown by less than a third over the last two decades, herbicide use
has doubled. Herbicide use for maize production was declining before the
introduction of GE crops, but has increased since 2002.
Glyphosate was
assessed as carcinogenic by the International Agency for Research on
Cancer (IARC) under the World Health Organization. Some glyphosate-based
herbicides also contain other more toxic herbicides - such as 2,4-D, a
key ingredient in Agent Orange, the infamous Vietnam War defoliant - to
increase their efficacy against resistant weeds.
Diversity declining
GE crops, typically
with traits which tend to result in monoculture, have been promoted as
more productive than non-GE crops. As farmers adopt GE crop varieties,
others varieties are abandoned, and access to such seeds are
increasingly in the hands of giant transnational seed companies rather
than government facilities.
But when farmers
lose confidence in GE crops or wish to turn to non-GE varieties for
other reasons, they are no longer able to simply revert to their old
non-GE varieties or to crossbreed them. Instead, they now need to buy
seeds from these very same monopolistic transnational seed companies.
Similarly, the
impact on ecological diversity, important for maintaining fragile
ecosystems, cannot be underestimated. Biodiversity reduction
fundamentally transforms ecosystems. Rich, diverse traditional farmer
knowledge - of the use of plants and other natural resources to maintain
soil and plant health, and to conserve water and other natural
resources - is also being ignored in favour of 'hi-tech',
genetically-engineered, agro-chemical and other 'industrial' solutions,
which invariably engender new problems. For example, pesticides are
intended to be toxic only to pests, but not to others, but most are
carcinogenic or otherwise dangerous to human health.
While GE crops
offer some benefits, unclear productivity advantages and rising pest
resistance are reducing the edge it once claimed over conventionally
developed crops. GE crops seem to be harmless, but there is still much
uncertainty over their longer-term effects, including increased
pesticide resistance and reduced diversity. The scientific ethic
advising precaution in the face of uncertainty seems to have been
abandoned in favour of profitable expediency, ostensibly to increase
productivity and reduce agro-chemical reliance, neither of which have
been achieved.
Corporate power growing
As many of the same
corporations or conglomerates sell both GE seeds as well as the
agro-chemicals needed to increase yields, the potential for other types
of innovation is inevitably diminished. Recent mergers and acquisitions
have further consolidated oligopolies selling both seeds and
agrochemicals, exemplified by the acquisition bid for Monsanto by Bayer.
Not surprisingly then, companies have less incentive to develop new
traits, or to invest heavily in tackling other problems when greater
pest resistance increases sales of their pesticides and overall profits.
All this is often
justified in terms of the urgent need to feed the hundreds of millions
of hungry people in the world. However, although there already is enough
food being produced to feed everyone in the world, the real problem is
one of access, as most of the hungry do not have the means to buy or
produce the food they need.
Therefore, while US
agribusiness has long claimed that GMOs will "save the world", there
has been little compelling evidence to this effect after two decades.
Proponents select evidence to support their exaggerated claims that GE
varieties meet many needs in different parts of the world, although
their actual track records are much more modest and chequered.
Much of the
resistance against GE crops is due to the interests and methods of the
agribusiness transnationals dominating food production, both directly
and indirectly through their control and promotion of seeds,
agrochemicals, etc.
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