Prime Minister Manmohan Singh stirred a hornet's nest when he warned against succumbing to ‘unscientific prejudices’ against genetically modified (GM) crops. Speaking at the 101st Indian Science Congress at Jammu. He claimed that biotechnology has great potential to improve yields and his government remains committed ‘to promoting the use of these new technologies for agricultural development’.
Prime Minister’s statement lauding the controversial GM
technology has not come as any surprise. Two environment ministers – Jairam
Ramesh and Jayanthi Natarajan – have been eased out in the recent past essentially
because of their opposition to GM crops. Jairam Ramesh was responsible for
imposing a moratorium on Bt brinjal which if approved for cultivation would
have opened up flood gates for the introduction of many more GM food crops; and
his successor Jayanthi Natarajan who is generally believed to have resisted
industry pressures to allow field trials of GM crops.
The day after
Prime Minister openly came out in support of the dangerously risky GM
technology, Monsanto stocks rose by 5.45 per cent.
The stakes are
therefore very high. For the
multi-billion dollar industry, India’s refusal to accept GM crops can
spell a
death knell. Considering that many State governments have refused
permission
for holding field trials of GM crops, and the swelling opposition from
Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture and subsequently the
Supreme
Court appointed Technical Expert Committee (TEC) the industry has been
mounting
pressure through the back channels. But let's first understand how true
the so-called ‘scientific’ claims of the industry are; and whether
GM crops are actually safe for human health and environment.
Prime Minister says that GM technology has great
potential to improve yields. This has been claimed by the industry too. But the
fact is that it is now 20 years since the first GM crop was introduced in the
United States, and there is still no GM crop that increases crop productivity.
US Department of Agriculture’s own studies show that the yields of GM corn and
Soybean are less than that of conventional varieties. Even in India, the Central Institute for
Cotton Research (CICR) Nagpur, which monitors the cotton crop, has admitted:
“No significant yield advantage has been observed between 2004-2011 when area
under Bt cotton increased from 5.4 to 96 per cent.”
The argument that the world needs to produce more for
the growing population by the year 2050, and therefore it needs GM crops
therefore does not hold true. But let’s look at it. Is there a shortage of food
in the world? According to the USDA estimate for 2013, the world produced food
good enough to feed 14 billion people. In other words, the world produces food
for twice the existing population. The real problem lies in food wastage. Nearly
40 per cent of the food produced is wasted. In the US alone $ 165 billion worth
of food is wasted, enough to meet the food requirement of the entire
sub-Saharan Africa.
In India, which has close to 250 million people going
to bed empty stomach, appalling hunger is not because of any shortfall in food
production. In June 2013, India had a record food surplus of 82.3 million
tones. It has already exported 20 million tonnes out if it, and there are plans
to export another 20 million tones so as to reduce the carrying cost of stored
food. Instead of increasing food production, the Food Ministry is planning to
reduce food procurement and also use the huge stocks with the Food Corporation
of India for commodity trading.
The promise of
reduction in pesticides usage has also
fallen flat. According to Washington State University researcher Charles
Benbrook, between 1996 and 2011, farmers in US are applying an
additional 181million litres of chemical pesticides. In 2012, on an
average 20 per cent more
pesticides were applied by GM farmers. This is now expected to go up by
25 per
cent with the introduction of the next range of GM crops which will use a
cocktail of herbicides including the deadly broad-spectrum chemicals.
In Argentina, the application of chemical pesticides
has risen from 34 million litres in the mid-1990s when the GM soybean crops
were first introduced to more than 317 million litres in 2012, roughly a ten
times increase. On an average, Argentine farmers use twice the quantity of
pesticides per acre than their American counterparts. In Brazil, which has
recently taken over Argentina as far as the spread of GM crops is concerned,
pesticides use has gone up by 190 per cent in the past decade.
The Chinese farmers are spraying 20 times more pesticides
to control pests. In India, the story is no different. Regardless of what the
industry claims, the fact remains that the usage of pesticides too has gone up
in India. In 2005, Rs 649-crore worth of chemical pesticides was used on cotton
in India. In 2010, when roughly 92 per cent area under cotton shifted to Bt
cotton varieties, the pesticides usage in terms of value increased to Rs 880.40
crore.
Equally more worrisome is the emergence of hard-to-kill
weeds, called ‘super weeds’. Estimates show that in US over 100 million acres
is now infested with super weeds. Besides using a cocktail of chemical
pesticides to control it, some US States are going in for hand weeding since
chemicals are no longer effective. In neighbouring Canada, more than 1 million
acre is infested with super weeds. Studies show that 21 weeds have now
developed resistance after GM crops came. Insects too are now developing
immunity against GM crops. In India, Monsanto has already accepted that
bollworm pest is becoming resistant.
With no benefits accruing as far as increasing crop
yields is concerned or reducing pesticides applications and thereby protecting
the human health and environment, I don’t know what promise the Prime Minister
sees in GM crops. In fact, all evidence now points to an end of the era in
industrial agriculture. With soils poisoned, underground water mined
ruthlessly, and with the entire food chain contaminated by chemical pesticides
and fertilizers leading to more greenhouse gas emissions, the focus is now shifting
to ecological agriculture.
From Devinder Sharma here
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