
Gregory Conko
Economic Perspectives
Needless restrictions on agricultural biotechnology would harm the world's
ability to battle hunger in the 21st century, say Gregory Conko and C.S.
Prakash, co-founders of the AgBioWorld Foundation. They say that the
concerns of anti-biotechnology campaigners simply are not supported by the
scores of peer-reviewed scientific reports or data from tens of thousands
of field trials.
The AgBioWorld Foundation is a nonprofit organization that provides
information to the general public about developments in plant science,
biotechnology, and sustainable agriculture.
During the coming decades the world will face the extraordinary challenge
of conquering poverty and achieving genuine food security with a very
potent new tool: agricultural biotechnology. Skeptics argue that
transgenic plants represent a vast new threat to both the environment and
human health. However, that view is not supported by the overwhelming
weight of scientific evidence that has been generated over the last three
decades. Furthermore, such criticism ignores the fact that needless
restrictions on biotechnology could endanger our ability to battle hunger
in the 21st century.
Transgenic technology holds the potential to increase food production,
reduce the use of synthetic chemical pesticides, and actually make foods
safer and healthier. These advances are critical in a world where natural
resources are finite and where one-and-a-half billion people suffer from
hunger and malnutrition. Already, farmers in the United States, Canada,
and elsewhere have benefited from improvements in productivity and reduced
use of synthetic pesticides. But the real future of biotechnology lies in
addressing the special problems faced by farmers in less developed
nations.
Critics like to dismiss such claims as nothing more than corporate public
relations puffery. However, while most commercially available biotech
plants were designed for farmers in the industrialized world, the
increasing adoption of transgenic varieties by developing countries over
the past few years has been remarkable. According to the International
Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications (ISAAA), farmers
in less developed countries now grow nearly one-quarter of the world's
transgenic crops on more than 26 million acres (10.7 million hectares),
and they do so for many of the same reasons that farmers in industrialized
nations do.
PRODUCTIVITY GAINS FROM TRANSGENIC CROPS
Among the most important limiting factors in developing world agricultural
productivity is biotic stress from insects, weeds, and plant diseases.
Transgenic modifications common in several industrialized nations target
these same problems and can be easily transferred into local varieties to
help poor farmers in the developing world. For example, South African
farmers are already growing transgenic pest-resistant maize, and this year
began planting transgenic soy. South African and Chinese farmers have been
growing transgenic insect-resistant cotton for several years, and the
Indian government approved it for commercial cultivation in the spring of
2002. This transgenic cotton, similar to the varieties so popular in the
United States, is expected to boost yields by 30 percent or more for
Indian farmers, according to a recent article in the Economic Times. It
could even transform India from the world's third largest producer of
cotton into the largest.
Globally, transgenic varieties are now grown on more than 109 million
acres (44.2 million hectares) in Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile,
China, Mexico, South Africa, and the United States, according to ISAAA.
They are even grown on substantial amounts of acreage in Brazil, where no
transgenic varieties have yet been approved for commercial cultivation.
Farmers there looked across the border and saw how well their Argentine
neighbors were doing with transgenic varieties, and smuggling of
transgenic soybean seed became rampant. The European Union's (EU)
Directorate General for Agriculture estimates that Brazil is now the fifth
largest grower of transgenic crops.
MEETING ENVIRONMENTAL GOALS
Although this first generation of crops was designed primarily to improve
farming efficiency, the environmental benefits these crops offer are
extensive. The U.S. Department of Agriculture found that U.S. farmers
growing transgenic pest-resistant cotton, maize, and soy reduced the total
volume of insecticides and herbicides they sprayed by more than 8 million
pounds per year. Similar reductions have been seen in Canada with
transgenic rapeseed, according to the Canola Council of Canada.
In less developed nations where pesticides are typically sprayed on crops
by hand, transgenic pest-resistant crops have had even greater benefits.
In China, for example, some 400 to 500 cotton farmers die every year from
acute pesticide poisoning. A study conducted by researchers at Rutgers
University in the United States and the Chinese Academy of Sciences found
that adoption of transgenic cotton varieties in China has lowered the
amount of pesticides used by more than 75 percent and reduced the number
of pesticide poisonings by an equivalent amount. Another study by
economists at the University of Reading in Britain found that South
African cotton farmers have seen similar benefits.
The reduction in pesticide spraying also means that fewer natural
resources are consumed to manufacture and transport the chemicals.
Researchers at Auburn University and Louisiana State University in the
United States found that, in 2000 alone, U.S. farmers growing transgenic
cotton used 2.4 million fewer gallons of fuel, 93 million fewer gallons of
water, and were spared some 41,000 10-hour days needed to apply pesticide
sprays.
Transgenic herbicide-tolerant crops have promoted the adoption of farming
practices that reduce tillage or eliminate it altogether. Low-tillage
practices can decrease soil erosion by up to 90 percent compared to
conventional cultivation, saving valuable topsoil, improving soil
fertility, and dramatically reducing sedimentation in lakes, ponds, and
waterways.
The productivity gains generated by transgenic crops provide yet another
important environmental benefit: they could save millions of hectares of
sensitive wildlife habitat from being converted into farmland. The loss
and fragmentation of wildlife habitats caused by agricultural development
in regions experiencing the greatest population growth are widely
recognized as among the most serious threats to biodiversity. Thus,
increasing agricultural productivity is an essential environmental goal,
and one that would be much easier in a world where agricultural
biotechnology is in widespread use.
Opponents of biotechnology argue that organic farming can reduce pesticide
use even more than transgenic crops can. But as much as 40 percent of crop
productivity in Africa and Asia and about 20 percent in the industrialized
countries of North America and Europe are lost to insect pests, weeds, and
plant diseases. Organic production methods would only exacerbate those
crop losses. There is no way for organic farming to feed a global
population expected to grow to 8 or 9 billion people without having to
bring substantially more land into agricultural use.
Fortunately, many transgenic varieties that have been created specifically
for use in less developed nations will soon be ready for
commercialization. Examples include insect-resistant rice varieties for
Asia, virus-resistant sweet potato for Africa, and virus-resistant papaya
for Caribbean nations. The next generation of transgenic crops now in
research labs around the world is poised to bring even further
productivity improvements for the poor soils and harsh climates that are
characteristic of impoverished regions.
Scientists have already identified genes for resistance to environmental
stresses common in tropical nations, including tolerance to soils with
high salinity and to those that are particularly acidic or alkaline. Other
transgenic varieties can tolerate temporary drought conditions or extremes
of heat and cold.
ENSURING WORLDWIDE FOOD SECURITY
Biotechnology also offers hope of improving the nutritional benefits of
many foods. Among the most well known is the variety called "Golden Rice,"
genetically enhanced with added beta carotene, which is converted to
vitamin A in the human body. Another variety developed by the same
research team has elevated levels of digestible iron.
The diet of more than 3 billion people worldwide includes inadequate
levels of essential vitamins and minerals, such as vitamin A and iron.
Deficiency in just these two micronutrients can result in severe anemia,
impaired intellectual development, blindness, and even death. And even
though charities and aid agencies such as the United Nations Childrens'
Fund and the World Health Organization have made important strides in
reducing vitamin A and iron deficiency, success has been fleeting. No
permanent effective strategy has yet been devised, but Golden Rice may
finally provide one.
Importantly, the Golden Rice project is a prime example of the value of
extensive public sector and charitable research activities. The rice's
development was funded mainly by the New York-based Rockefeller
Foundation, which has promised to make the rice available to poor farmers
at little or no cost. It was created by scientists at public universities
in Switzerland and Germany with assistance from the Philippines-based
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) and from several
multinational corporations.
Golden Rice is not the only example. Scientists at publicly funded,
charitable, and corporate research centers are developing such crops as
cassava, papaya, and wheat with built-in resistance to common plant
viruses; rice that can more efficiently convert sunlight and
carbon-dioxide for faster growth; potatoes that produce a vaccine against
hepatitis B; bananas that produce a vaccine against cholera; and countless
others. One lab at Tuskegee University is enhancing the level of dietary
protein in sweet potatoes, a common staple crop in sub-Saharan Africa.
Admittedly, experts recognize that the problem of hunger and malnutrition
is not currently caused by a global shortage of food. The primary causes
of hunger in recent decades have been political unrest and corrupt
governments, poor transportation and infrastructure, and, of course,
poverty. All of these problems and more must be addressed if we are to
ensure real, worldwide food security. But producing enough for 8 or 9
billion people will require greater yields in the regions where food is
needed most, and transgenic crops are good, low-input tools for achieving
this.
ELIMINATING NEEDLESS RESTRICTIONS
Although the complexity of biological systems means that some promised
benefits of biotechnology are many years away, the biggest threat that
hungry populations currently face are restrictive policies stemming from
unwarranted public fears. Although most Americans tend to support
agricultural biotechnology, many Europeans and Asians have been far more
cautious. Anti-biotechnology campaigners in both industrialized and less
developed nations are feeding this ambivalence with scare stories that
have led to the adoption of restrictive policies. Those fears are simply
not supported by the scores of peer-reviewed scientific reports or the
data from tens of thousands of individual field trials.
Mankind has been modifying the genetic makeup of plants for thousands of
years, often in ways that could have had adverse environmental impacts and
that routinely introduced entirely new genes, proteins, and other
substances into the food supply. Food-grade tomatoes and potatoes are
routinely bred from wild varieties that are toxic to human beings, for
example. But plant breeders, biologists, and farmers have identified
methods to keep potentially dangerous plants from entering the food chain.
The evidence clearly shows there is no difference between the practices
necessary to ensure the safety of transgenic plants and the safety of
conventional ones. In fact, because more is known about the genes that are
moved in transgenic breeding methods, ensuring the safety of transgenic
plants is actually easier. But the public's reticence about transgenic
plants has resulted in extensive regulations that require literally
thousands of individual safety tests that are often duplicative and
largely unnecessary for ensuring environmental protection or consumer
safety. In the end, over-cautious rules result in hyperinflated research
and development costs and make it harder for poorer countries to share in
the benefits of biotechnology.
Perhaps more importantly, restrictions on transgenic plants and onerous
labeling requirements for biotech foods have caused many governments to
block commercialization not out of health or environmental concerns but
because of a legitimate fear that important European markets could be
closed to their exports. As last year's United Nations Development Report
acknowledged, opposition by European consumers and very strict legal
requirements in European Union member nations have held back the adoption
of transgenic crops in underdeveloped nations that need them.
Furthermore, the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, adopted in January 2000,
will tend to reinforce these counterproductive policies because it permits
governments to erect unwarranted restrictions based on the Precautionary
Principle, the notion that even hypothetical risks should be enough to
keep new products off the market, regardless of their potential benefits.
Thus, EU nations can restrict imports of transgenic crops from both
industrialized and less developed nations, no matter how much scientific
data have been presented showing them to be safe, because opponents can
always hypothesize yet another novel risk.
Admittedly, advocates have to take the public's concerns more seriously.
Better sharing of information and a more forthright public dialogue are
necessary to explain why scientists are confident that transgenic crops
are safe. No one argues that we should not proceed with caution, but
needless restrictions on agricultural biotechnology could dramatically
slow the pace of progress and keep important advances out of the hands of
people who need them. This is the tragic side effect of unwarranted
concern.
AN IMPORTANT DEVELOPMENT TOOL
Ultimately, biotechnology is more than just a new and useful agricultural
tool. It could also be a hugely important instrument of economic
development in many poorer regions of the globe. By making agriculture
more productive, labor and resources could be freed for use in other areas
of economic growth in nations where farming currently occupies 70 or 80
percent of the population. This, in turn, would be an important step in
the journey toward genuine food security.
The choice is clear. Innovators must proceed with due caution. But as a
report jointly published by the United Kingdom's Royal Society, the
National Academies of Science from Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and the
United States, and the Third World Academy of Science contends: "It is
critical that the potential benefits of [transgenic] technology become
available to developing countries." It is also critical that
industrialized countries not stand in their way.
Note: The opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect
the views or policies of the U.S. Department of State.
** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed for research and educational purposes only. **
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Last Updated on 5/17/02 Email: information@biotech-info.net |
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