Sunday, August 25, 2013

Golden Rice: Lifesaver?

Golden Rice: Lifesaver?

ONE bright morning this month, 400 protesters smashed down the high fences surrounding a field in the Bicol region of the Philippines and uprooted the genetically modified rice plants growing inside.


Had the plants survived long enough to flower, they would have betrayed a distinctly yellow tint in the otherwise white part of the grain. That is because the rice is endowed with a gene from corn and another from a bacterium, making it the only variety in existence to produce beta carotene, the source of vitamin A. Its developers call it “Golden Rice.”
The concerns voiced by the participants in the Aug. 8 act of vandalism — that Golden Rice could pose unforeseen risks to human health and the environment, that it would ultimately profit big agrochemical companies — are a familiar refrain in the long-running controversy over the merits of genetically engineered crops. They are driving the desire among some Americans for mandatory “G.M.O.” labels on food with ingredients made from crops whose DNA has been altered in a laboratory. And they have motivated similar attacks on trials of other genetically modified crops in recent years: grapes designed to fight off a deadly virus in France, wheat designed to have a lower glycemic index in Australia, sugar beets in Oregon designed to tolerate a herbicide, to name a few.
“We do not want our people, especially our children, to be used in these experiments,” a farmer who was a leader of the protest told the Philippine newspaper Remate.
But Golden Rice, which appeared on the cover of Time Magazine in 2000 before it was quite ready for prime time, is unlike any of the genetically engineered crops in wide use today, designed to either withstand herbicides sold by Monsanto and other chemical companies or resist insect attacks, with benefits for farmers but not directly for consumers.
And a looming decision by the Philippine government about whether to allow Golden Rice to be grown beyond its four remaining field trials has added a new dimension to the debate over the technology’s merits.
Not owned by any company, Golden Rice is being developed by a nonprofit group called the International Rice Research Institute with the aim of providing a new source of vitamin A to people both in the Philippines, where most households get most of their calories from rice, and eventually in many other places in a world where rice is eaten every day by half the population. Lack of the vital nutrient causes blindness in a quarter-million to a half-million children each year. It affects millions of people in Asia and Africa and so weakens the immune system that some two million die each year of diseases they would otherwise survive.
The destruction of the field trial, and the reasons given for it, touched a nerve among scientists around the world, spurring them to counter assertions of the technology’s health and environmental risks. On a petition supporting Golden Rice circulated among scientists and signed by several thousand, many vented a simmering frustration with activist organizations like Greenpeace, which they see as playing on misplaced fears of genetic engineering in both the developing and the developed worlds. Some took to other channels to convey to American foodies and Filipino farmers alike the broad scientific consensusthat G.M.O.’s are not intrinsically more risky than other crops and can be reliably tested. 
At stake, they say, is not just the future of biofortified rice but also a rational means to evaluate a technology whose potential to improve nutrition in developing countries, and developed ones, may otherwise go unrealized.
“There’s so much misinformation floating around about G.M.O.’s that is taken as fact by people,” said Michael D. Purugganan, a professor of genomics and biology and the dean for science at New York University, who sought to calm health-risk concerns in a primer on GMA News Online, a media outlet in the Philippines: “The genes they inserted to make the vitamin are not some weird manufactured material,” he wrote, “but are also found in squash, carrots and melons.” 
Mr. Purugganan, who studies plant evolution, does not work on genetically engineered crops, and until recently had not participated in the public debates over the risks and benefits of G.M.O.’s. But having been raised in a middle-class family in Manila, he felt compelled to weigh in on Golden Rice. “A lot of the criticism of G.M.O.’s in the Western world suffers from a lack of understanding of how really dire the situation is in developing countries,” he said.
Some proponents of G.M.O.’s say that more critical questions, like where biotechnology should fall as a priority in the efforts to address the root causes of hunger and malnutrition and how to prevent a few companies from controlling it, would be easier to address were they not lumped together with unfounded fears by those who oppose G.M.O.’s.
“It is long past time for scientists to stand up and shout, ‘No more lies — no more fear-mongering,’ ” said Nina V. Fedoroff, a professor at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia and a former science adviser to the American secretary of state, who helped spearhead the petition. “We’re talking about saving millions of lives here.”
Precisely because of its seemingly high-minded purpose, Golden Rice has drawn suspicion from biotechnology skeptics beyond the demonstrators who forced their way into the field trial. Many countries ban the cultivation of all genetically modified crops, and after the rice’s media debut early in the last decade, Vandana Shiva, an Indian environmentalist, called it a “Trojan horse” whose purpose was to gain public support for all manner of genetically modified crops that would benefit multinational corporations at the expense of poor farmers and consumers.
In a 2001 article, “The Great Yellow Hype,” the author Michael Pollan, a critic of industrial agriculture, suggested that it might have been developed to “win an argument rather than solve a public-health problem.” He cited biotechnology industry advertisements that featured the virtues of the rice, which at the time had to be ingested in large quantities to deliver a meaningful dose of vitamin A.
But the rice has since been retooled: a bowl now provides 60 percent of the daily requirement of vitamin A for healthy children. And Gerard Barry, the Golden Rice project leader at the International Rice Research Institute — and, it must be said, a former senior scientist and executive at Monsanto — suggests that attempts to discredit Golden Rice discount the suffering it could alleviate if successful. He said, too, that critics who suggest encouraging poor families to simply eat fruits and vegetables that contain beta carotene disregard the expense and logistical difficulties that would thwart such efforts. NYTIMES

AUSTRALIA: Greens pitch for GM levy, labels


Greens pitch for GM levy, labels


The Greens have raised the stakes in the debate over genetically modified food, calling for a contamination levy on GM seed producers and the introduction of rigorous labelling laws on all products.
Money from the levy would be used to compensate farmers in cases where GM-free crops were contaminated by GM products from neighbouring farms.

Greens pitch for GM levy, labels
The mandatory labelling laws would see foods that contained any ingredient, additive, processing aid or other constituent produced using GM clearly marked. It would include meat from animals fed with GM grains.
The Greens expect the policy to be a big vote winner at the election with some polls showing 90 per cent of consumers want ingredients derived from GM crops labelled on food.
Senator Rachel Siewert, who has a degree in agricultural science from the University of WA and worked as a research officer for the Department of Agriculture and Food WA before entering politics, said Australia did not have proper safeguards on GM food.
She said GM labelling was extremely limited and screening of products by Food Standards Australia and New Zealand and the Office of the Gene Technology Regulator inadequate.
Senator Siewert said the regulatory bodies did not test for double-stranded ribonucleic acid (dsRNA) proteins which a major study had shown could be unexpectedly produced in the genetic modification processes.
Research showed the proteins transferred easily to humans and animals and could change genes.
"We are concerned about consumers' right to know and about protecting farmers who want to stay GM free to give themselves access to premium markets," Senator Siewert said. "At the moment farmers are losing their choice to stay GM free and we make no apologies for seeking a levy on the companies that produce GM seed to create a compensation pool for those farmers."
But CropLife chief executive officer Matthew Cossey said the levy showed complete ignorance of the foundations of agricultural coexistence.
Croplife, an industry body representing the agricultural chemical and crop biotechnology sector, believes the proposal ignores "the agronomic, economic and environmental benefits of GM crops and the rights of Australian farmers to choose what approved crops they want to grow".
Mr Cossey said it was pure hypocrisy that the party which demanded the government adhere to and act on the science of climate change now failed to adhere to the proven science on agricultural biotechnology.
WA is on the frontline of the debate over the issue with Kojonup neighbours Stephen Marsh and Mike Baxter fighting a landmark court case and sales of Monsanto's GM canola seed booming in WA.
Mr Marsh alleges that GM canola from Mr Baxter's farm contaminated his land and caused the loss of his organic-grower status in a case set for trial in the Supreme Court early next year.
Monsanto, the world's biggest producer of GM products, recently paid $4.5 million to increase its stake in local crop breeding company InterGrain to 26 per cent under a controversial deal backed by the WA Government.
Since the WA Government gave growers approval for GM canola in 2010, the planting area has almost tripled to 209,000ha.
Monsanto has announced that WA growers purchased a record 416 tonnes of Roundup Ready seed, a 38 per cent growth in sales from last year compared to 22 per cent nationally.
Pro-GM farmers, including the Pastoralists and Graziers Association, accused the Greens of scaremongering and said there was danger the cost of any levy being passed on to grain growers.
China recently lifted restrictions on imports of GM canola but many key markets remain highly sensitive on the issue.
The discovery of GM wheat on a US farm this year saw Japan and South-East Asian flour mills impose import restrictions. The West

INDIA: Boost GM crops to meet food security demand: Sharad Pawar


Boost GM crops to meet food security demand: Sharad Pawar


Ahead of the debate on the Food Security Bill in parliament, Agriculture 

Sharad pawar

Sharad Pawar has called for easing the environment for conducting field trials for genetically modified (GM) crops. 

Minister Sharad Pawar said Saturday that while he supports the Bill, he has concerns about keeping up with rising demand unless drastic steps, including approval to more genetically modified crops, are taken simultaneously to boost agricultural production.
Related: Don't stop GM crops because of wrong fears, says Pawar
In a detailed interview to The Indian Express, Pawar said his biggest concern was that incentives to the farmer may be cut to meet the subsidy burden arising from this Bill, which, in turn, could set off a negative spiral, forcing India to import large amounts from abroad.
Related: Experts slam SC panel's report on GM crops
"My worry is not today or tomorrow, but when it (Food Security Bill) will be in full swing... By next year, the subsidy bill will go up to Rs 1,25,000 crore. My worry is that any finance minister or finance secretary will not be happy with this burden and their advice to the council of ministers will be that don't hike the minimum support price... That will directly affect farmers. And if the farmer gets hurt, he will shift from crop A to B. So, if he shifts from wheat and rice to some other crop, then how are we going to implement food security?"
Related: 'US firms to blame for opposition to GM crops'
The country, Pawar added, will have no choice but to import, which will send international prices soaring because India will have a high demand. "So for that purpose, we have no choice but to produce more. For that, we have to provide money for irrigation, electricity, concentrate in a big way on the research for development of new type of seeds. We have to see fertiliser is available.
We have to develop the infrastructure of our marketing. We have to see that the farmer also benefits. We can definitely go for a Food Security Bill, but we cannot neglect this aspect."
On this count, Pawar called for easing the environment for conducting field trials for genetically modified (GM) crops. He pointed out that at present, 91 per cent of the land under cotton cultivation is Bt Cotton, because of which India has moved from a net importer of cotton to the second largest exporter of cotton.
"I can understand that we have to be very careful, but I don't understand why to ban, why not to allow trials? There are a number of crops where our scientists have developed a good variety of transgenic crops but they are not even allowed to take trials... We should take the views of those who are supposed to produce and not a few NGOs," said Pawar.
At the same time, the Agriculture Minister said, the current situation was encouraging and that the government could meet the demands of the Bill at present production levels. In fact, he added that production had soared because of better MSP, financial support to states and shifting the focus of production to eastern states.
"We introduced the concept of bringing the green revolution to eastern India... we concentrated on Bihar, Chhattisgarh, eastern Uttar Predesh, Orissa, West Bengal and Assam... Because of these efforts, 55 per cent of the country's rice production today comes from these states. It has never happened."
Pawar also discounted the argument that the provisions of the Bill will have any immediate adverse effect on the economy since the implementation will start in right earnest only towards the next financial year. "There is one view in my party about the timing of this Bill because of the weakening rupee. Certain sections of my party feel this is not the time to roll out populist schemes. But then this has been in the manifesto."
He, however, clarified that he did not fully agree with that view. Calling for opening up the agricultural trade as far as possible, Pawar cautioned that imposing restrictions on exports in the name of food security will only accentuate the problem. Better food security, according to him, could only be achieved if the farmer is incentivised also by export opportunities to produce more. "If we don't take appropriate steps to improve production, it will definitely affect (food exports)," he said.
'No pre-'91, govt has corrected course'
Sharad Pawar, who was among the top few in the Narasimha Rao government that backed the Manmohan Singh-led economic reforms of 1991, conceded that some decisions of this government could have conveyed an impression that India had gone back to pre-1991 days but added, that it has now corrected course.IE