A more detailed look at what he have presented previously.
When you think about the wasteland we've left of farms around the world poisoned with torrents of pesticides and soil-destroying crops like soy and wheat, what we have given up palls greatly to what we've gotten back.
Doubts About the Promised Bounty of Genetically Modified Crops
LONDON — The controversy over genetically modified crops has long focused on largely unsubstantiated fears that they are unsafe to eat.
But
an extensive examination by The New York Times indicates that the
debate has missed a more basic problem — genetic modification in the
United States and Canada has not accelerated increases in crop yields or
led to an overall reduction in the use of chemical pesticides.
The
promise of genetic modification was twofold: By making crops immune to
the effects of weedkillers and inherently resistant to many pests, they
would grow so robustly that they would become indispensable to feeding
the world’s growing population, while also requiring fewer applications
of sprayed pesticides.
Twenty
years ago, Europe largely rejected genetic modification at the same
time the United States and Canada were embracing it. Comparing results
on the two continents, using independent data as well as academic and
industry research, shows how the technology has fallen short of the
promise.
An
analysis by The Times using United Nations data showed that the United
States and Canada have gained no discernible advantage in yields — food
per acre — when measured against Western Europe, a region with
comparably modernized agricultural producers like France and Germany.
Also, a recent National Academy of Sciences report
found that “there was little evidence” that the introduction of
genetically modified crops in the United States had led to yield gains
beyond those seen in conventional crops.
At
the same time, herbicide use has increased in the United States, even
as major crops like corn, soybeans and cotton have been converted to
modified varieties. And the United States has fallen behind Europe’s
biggest producer, France, in reducing the overall use of pesticides,
which includes both herbicides and insecticides.
One
measure, contained in data from the United States Geological Survey,
shows the stark difference in the use of pesticides. Since genetically
modified crops were introduced in the United States two decades ago for
crops like corn, cotton and soybeans, the use of toxins that kill
insects and fungi has fallen by a third, but the spraying of herbicides,
which are used in much higher volumes, has risen by 21 percent.
By
contrast, in France, use of insecticides and fungicides has fallen by a
far greater percentage — 65 percent — and herbicide use has decreased
as well, by 36 percent.
Profound
differences over genetic engineering have split Americans and Europeans
for decades. Although American protesters as far back as 1987 pulled up
prototype potato plants, European anger at the idea of fooling with nature has been far more sustained. In the last few years, the March Against Monsanto
has drawn thousands of protesters in cities like Paris and Basel,
Switzerland, and opposition to G.M. foods is a foundation of the Green
political movement. Still, Europeans eat those foods when they buy
imports from the United States and elsewhere.
Fears
about the harmful effects of eating G.M. foods have proved to be
largely without scientific basis. The potential harm from pesticides,
however, has drawn researchers’ attention. Pesticides are toxic by
design — weaponized versions, like sarin, were developed in Nazi Germany — and have been linked to developmental delays and cancer.
“These chemicals are largely unknown,” said David Bellinger, a professor at the Harvard University School of Public Health, whose research
has attributed the loss of nearly 17 million I.Q. points among American
children 5 years old and under to one class of insecticides. “We do
natural experiments on a population,” he said, referring to exposure to
chemicals in agriculture, “and wait until it shows up as bad.”
The
industry is winning on both ends — because the same companies make and
sell both the genetically modified plants and the poisons. Driven by
these sales, the combined market capitalizations of Monsanto, the largest seed company, and Syngenta,
the Swiss pesticide giant, have grown more than sixfold in the last
decade and a half. The two companies are separately involved in merger
agreements that would lift their new combined values to more than $100
billion each.
When presented with the findings, Robert T. Fraley,
the chief technology officer at Monsanto, said The Times had
cherry-picked its data to reflect poorly on the industry. “Every farmer
is a smart businessperson, and a farmer is not going to pay for a
technology if they don’t think it provides a major benefit,” he said.
“Biotech tools have clearly driven yield increases enormously.”
Regarding
the use of herbicides, in a statement, Monsanto said, “While overall
herbicide use may be increasing in some areas where farmers are
following best practices to manage emerging weed issues, farmers in
other areas with different circumstances may have decreased or
maintained their herbicide usage.”
Genetically
modified crops can sometimes be effective. Monsanto and others often
cite the work of Matin Qaim, a researcher at Georg-August-University of
Göttingen, Germany, including a meta-analysis of studies that he helped write
finding significant yield gains from genetically modified crops. But in
an interview and emails, Dr. Qaim said he saw significant effects
mostly from insect-resistant varieties in the developing world,
particularly in India.
“Currently
available G.M. crops would not lead to major yield gains in Europe,” he
said. And regarding herbicide-resistant crops in general: “I don’t
consider this to be the miracle type of technology that we couldn’t live
without.”
A Vow to Curb Chemicals
First came the Flavr Savr
tomato in 1994, which was supposed to stay fresh longer. The next year
it was a small number of bug-resistant russet potatoes. And by 1996,
major genetically modified crops were being planted in the United
States.
Monsanto,
the most prominent champion of these new genetic traits, pitched them
as a way to curb the use of its pesticides. “We’re certainly not
encouraging farmers to use more chemicals,” a company executive told The
Los Angeles Times in 1994. The next year, in a news release, the
company said that its new gene for seeds, named Roundup Ready, “can
reduce overall herbicide use.”
Originally,
the two main types of genetically modified crops were either resistant
to herbicides, allowing crops to be sprayed with weedkillers, or
resistant to some insects.
Figures from the United States Department of Agriculture
show herbicide use skyrocketing in soybeans, a leading G.M. crop,
growing by two and a half times in the last two decades, at a time when
planted acreage of the crop grew by less than a third. Use in corn was
trending downward even before the introduction of G.M. crops, but then
nearly doubled from 2002 to 2010, before leveling off. Weed resistance
problems in such crops have pushed overall usage up.
To some, this outcome was predictable. The whole point of engineering bug-resistant plants “was to reduce insecticide
use, and it did,” said Joseph Kovach, a retired Ohio State University
researcher who studied the environmental risks of pesticides. But the
goal of herbicide-resistant seeds was to “sell more product,” he said —
more herbicide.
Farmers
with crops overcome by weeds, or a particular pest or disease, can
understandably be G.M. evangelists. “It’s silly bordering on ridiculous
to turn our backs on a technology that has so much to offer,” said Duane
Grant, the chairman of the Amalgamated Sugar Company, a cooperative of
more than 750 sugar beet farmers in the Northwest.
He says crops resistant to Roundup, Monsanto’s most popular weedkiller, saved his cooperative.
But
weeds are becoming resistant to Roundup around the world — creating an
opening for the industry to sell more seeds and more pesticides. The
latest seeds have been engineered for resistance to two weedkillers,
with resistance to as many as five planned. That will also make it
easier for farmers battling resistant weeds to spray a widening array of
poisons sold by the same companies.
Growing resistance to Roundup is also reviving old, and contentious, chemicals. One is 2,4-D, an ingredient in Agent Orange, the infamous Vietnam War defoliant. Its potential risks have long divided scientists and have alarmed advocacy groups.
Another is dicamba. In Louisiana, Monsanto is spending nearly $1 billion
to begin production of the chemical there. And even though Monsanto’s
version is not yet approved for use, the company is already selling
seeds that are resistant to it — leading to reports that some farmers
are damaging neighbors’ crops by illegally spraying older versions of the toxin.
Two
farmers, 4,000 miles apart, recently showed a visitor their corn seeds.
The farmers, Bo Stone and Arnaud Rousseau, are sixth-generation tillers
of the land. Both use seeds made by DuPont, the giant chemical company
that is merging with Dow Chemical.
To the naked eye, the seeds looked identical. Inside, the differences are profound.
In
Rowland, N.C., near the South Carolina border, Mr. Stone’s seeds brim
with genetically modified traits. They contain Roundup Ready, a
Monsanto-made trait resistant to Roundup, as well as a gene made by Bayer
that makes crops impervious to a second herbicide. A trait called
Herculex I was developed by Dow and Pioneer, now part of DuPont, and
attacks the guts of insect larvae. So does YieldGard, made by Monsanto.
Another
big difference: the price tag. Mr. Rousseau’s seeds cost about $85 for a
50,000-seed bag. Mr. Stone spends roughly $153 for the same amount of
biotech seeds.
For farmers, doing without genetically modified crops is not a simple choice. Genetic traits are not sold à la carte.
Mr.
Stone, 45, has a master’s degree in agriculture and listens to Prime
Country radio in his Ford pickup. He has a test field where he tries out
new seeds, looking for characteristics that he particularly values —
like plants that stand well, without support.
“I’m
choosing on yield capabilities and plant characteristics more than I am
on G.M.O. traits” like bug and poison resistance, he said, underscoring
a crucial point: Yield is still driven by breeding plants to bring out desirable traits, as it has been for thousands of years.
That
said, Mr. Stone values genetic modifications to reduce his insecticide
use (though he would welcome help with stink bugs, a troublesome pest
for many farmers). And Roundup resistance in pigweed has emerged as a
problem.
“No G.M. trait for us is a silver bullet,” he said.
By
contrast, at Mr. Rousseau’s farm in Trocy-en-Multien, a village outside
Paris, his corn has none of this engineering because the European Union bans most crops like these.
“The
door is closed,” says Mr. Rousseau, 42, who is vice president of one of
France’s many agricultural unions. His 840-acre farm was a site of
World War I carnage in the Battle of the Marne.
As
with Mr. Stone, Mr. Rousseau’s yields have been increasing, though they
go up and down depending on the year. Farm technology has also been
transformative. “My grandfather had horses and cattle for cropping,” Mr.
Rousseau said. “I’ve got tractors with motors.”
He
wants access to the same technologies as his competitors across the
Atlantic, and thinks G.M. crops could save time and money.
“Seen
from Europe, when you speak with American farmers or Canadian farmers,
we’ve got the feeling that it’s easier,” Mr. Rousseau said. “Maybe it’s
not right. I don’t know, but it’s our feeling.”
With the world’s population expected to reach nearly 10 billion
by 2050, Monsanto has long held out its products as a way “to help meet
the food demands of these added billions,” as it said in a 1995
statement. That remains an industry mantra.
“It’s
absolutely key that we keep innovating,” said Kurt Boudonck, who
manages Bayer’s sprawling North Carolina greenhouses. “With the current
production practices, we are not going to be able to feed that amount of
people.”
But
a broad yield advantage has not emerged. The Times looked at regional
data from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization,
comparing main genetically modified crops in the United States and
Canada with varieties grown in Western Europe, a grouping used by the
agency that comprises seven nations, including the two largest
agricultural producers, France and Germany.
For
rapeseed, a variant of which is used to produce canola oil, The Times
compared Western Europe with Canada, the largest producer, over three
decades, including a period well before the introduction of genetically
modified crops.
Despite
rejecting genetically modified crops, Western Europe maintained a lead
over Canada in yields. While that is partly because different varieties
are grown in the two regions, the trend lines in the relative yields
have not shifted in Canada’s favor since the introduction of G.M. crops,
the data shows.
For
corn, The Times compared the United States with Western Europe. Over
three decades, the trend lines between the two barely deviate. And sugar
beets, a major source of sugar, have shown stronger yield growth
recently in Western Europe than the United States, despite the dominance
of genetically modified varieties over the last decade.
Jack
Heinemann, a professor at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand,
did a pioneering 2013 study comparing trans-Atlantic yield trends, using
United Nations data. Western Europe, he said, “hasn’t been penalized in
any way for not making genetic engineering one of its biotechnology
choices.”
Biotech
executives suggested making narrower comparisons. Dr. Fraley of
Monsanto highlighted data comparing yield growth in Nebraska and France,
while an official at Bayer suggested Ohio and France. These comparisons
can be favorable to the industry, while comparing other individual
American states can be unfavorable.
Michael
Owen, a weed scientist at Iowa State University, said that while the
industry had long said G.M.O.s would “save the world,” they still
“haven’t found the mythical yield gene.”
Few New Markets
Battered
by falling crop prices and consumer resistance that has made it hard to
win over new markets, the agrochemical industry has been swept by
buyouts. Bayer recently announced a deal to acquire Monsanto. And the state-owned China National Chemical Corporation has received American regulatory approval to acquire Syngenta, though Syngenta later warned the takeover could be delayed by scrutiny from European authorities.
The
deals are aimed at creating giants even more adept at selling both
seeds and chemicals. Already, a new generation of seeds is coming to
market or in development. And they have grand titles. There is the Bayer
Balance GT Soybean Performance System. Monsanto’s Genuity SmartStax RIB Complete corn. Dow’s PhytoGen with Enlist and WideStrike 3 Insect Protection.
In
industry jargon, they are “stacked” with many different genetically
modified traits. And there are more to come. Monsanto has said that the
corn seed of 2025 will have 14 traits and allow farmers to spray five
different kinds of herbicide.
Newer
genetically modified crops claim to do many things, such as protecting
against crop diseases and making food more nutritious. Some may be
effective, some not. To the industry, shifting crucial crops like corn,
soybeans, cotton and rapeseed almost entirely to genetically modified
varieties in many parts of the world fulfills a genuine need. To
critics, it is a marketing opportunity.
“G.M.O.
acceptance is exceptionally low in Europe,” said Liam Condon, the head
of Bayer’s crop science division, in an interview the day the Monsanto
deal was announced. He added: “But there are many geographies around the
world where the need is much higher and where G.M.O. is accepted. We
will go where the market and the customers demand our technology.”
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