Wednesday, February 19, 2014

U.S. Tops As Largest GM Crops Cultivator, India At 4th Rank

U.S. Tops As Largest GM Crops Cultivator, India At 4th Rank

cr
Bangalore: In a country like India where agriculture contributes around 70 percent of the country’s revenue, genetically modified (GM) crops are now increasingly cultivated by the agriculturists for India’s immense population. According to the latest survey carried out by the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications, India is the fourth world's largest cultivator of genetically modified (GM) crops, reports Deccan Herald. The country produced three times more than what China sows.

With a massive production of 70 million hectares under genetically modified crops like maize, soybean, cotton, canola, sugar beet, alfalfa, papaya and squash, super power nation, U.S. is the largest grower of GM crops followed by Brazil, Argentina and India.

The survey further claimed that as of 2013, Indian cultivator genetically engineered Bt cotton in 11 million hectares (ha) of land with an adoption rate of 95 percent.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the Indian Science Congress in Jammu recently said, “While safety must be ensured, we should not succumb to unscientific prejudices against Bt crops. Our government remains committed to promoting the use of these new technologies for agriculture development,” reports Deccan Herald.

Monday, February 17, 2014

A Clear Case for Golden Rice

A Clear Case for Golden Rice

MELBOURNE – Greenpeace, the global environmental NGO, typically leads protests. Last month, it became the target.
Patrick Moore, a spokesperson for the protesters – and himself an early Greenpeace member – accused the organization of complicity in the deaths of two million children per year. He was referring to deaths resulting from vitamin A deficiency, which is common among children for whom rice is the staple food.
These deaths could be prevented, Moore claims, by the use of “golden rice,” a form of the grain that has been genetically modified to have a higher beta carotene content than ordinary rice. Greenpeace, along with other organizations opposed to the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), has campaigned against the introduction of beta carotene, which is converted in the human body into vitamin A.
Moore’s mortality figures seem to be on the high side, but there is no doubting the seriousness of vitamin A deficiency among children, especially in parts of Africa and Southeast Asia. According to the World Health Organization, it causes blindness in about 250,000-500,000 pre-school children every year, about half of whom die within 12 months.
The deficiency also increases susceptibility to diseases like measles, still a significant cause of death in young children, although one that is declining as a result of vaccination. In some countries, lack of vitamin A is also a major factor in high rates of maternal mortality during pregnancy and childbirth.
First developed 15 years ago by Swiss scientists, golden rice specifically addresses vitamin A deficiency, and the first field trials were conducted a decade ago. But it is still not available to farmers. Initially, there was a need to develop improved varieties that would thrive where they are most needed. Further field trials had to be carried out to meet the strict regulations governing the release of GMOs. That hurdle was raised higher when activists destroyed fields in the Philippines where trials were being conducted.
Critics have suggested that golden rice is part of the biotech industry’s plans to dominate agriculture worldwide. But, although the agribusiness giant Syngenta did assist in developing the genetically modified rice, the company has stated that it is not planning to commercialize it. Low-income farmers will own their seeds and be able to retain seed from their harvests.
Indeed, Syngenta has given the right to sublicense the rice to a nonprofit organization called the Golden Rice Humanitarian Board. The board, which includes the two co-inventors, has the right to provide the rice to public research institutions and low-income farmers in developing countries for humanitarian use, as long as it does not charge more for it than the price for ordinary rice seeds.
When genetically modified crops were first developed in the 1980’s, there were grounds for caution. Would these crops be safe to eat? Might they not cross-pollinate with wild plants, passing on the special qualities they were given, such as resistance to pests, and so create new “superweeds”? In the 1990’s, as a Senate candidate for the Australian Greens, I was among those who argued for strong regulations to prevent biotech companies putting our health, or that of the environment, at risk in order to increase their profits.
Genetically modified crops are now grown on about one-tenth of the world’s cropland, and none of the disastrous consequences that we Greens feared have come to pass. There is no reliable scientific evidence that GM foods cause illness, despite the fact that they receive much more intense scrutiny than more “natural” foods. (Natural foods can also pose health risks, as was shown recently by studies establishing that a popular type of cinnamon can cause liver damage.)
Although cross-pollination between GM crops and wild plants can occur, so far no new superweeds have emerged. We should be pleased about that – and perhaps the regulations that were introduced in response to the concerns expressed by environmental organizations played a role in that outcome.
Regulations to protect the environment and the health of consumers should be maintained. Caution is reasonable. What needs to be rethought, however, is blanket opposition to the very idea of GMOs.
With any innovation, risks need to be weighed against possible benefits. Where the benefits are minor, even a small risk may not be justified; where those benefits are great, a more significant risk may well be worth taking.
Regulations should, for instance, be sensitive to the difference between releasing a GM crop that is resistant to the herbicide glyphosate (making it easier for farmers to control weeds) and releasing GM crops that can resist drought and are suitable for drought-prone regions of low-income countries. Similarly, a GM crop that has the potential to prevent blindness in a half-million children would be worth growing even if it does involve some risks. The irony is that glyphosate-resistant crops are grown commercially on millions of hectares of land, whereas golden rice (which has not been shown to pose any risk at all to human health or the environment) still cannot be released.
In some environmental circles, blanket opposition to GMOs is like taking a loyalty oath – dissidents are regarded as traitors in league with the evil biotech industry. It is time to move beyond such a narrowly ideological stance. Some GMOs may have a useful role to play in public health, and others in fighting the challenge of growing food in an era of climate change. We should consider the merits of each genetically modified plant on a case-by-case basis.

project-syndicate

Friday, February 14, 2014

EU set for groundbreaking vote on GM food

EU set for groundbreaking vote on GM food



European ministers are on the cusp of deciding whether to allow the cultivation of a new form of genetically modified (GM) maize in the EU.
Pioneer 1507 is a type of maize developed by DuPont and Dow chemical that is able to resist moths, such as the European corn borer and has already been approved as a component of animal feed.
The vote is very much up for grabs, with the European Council split on whether to allow the cultivation of the new crop. It has been over a decade since the original application to cultivate Pioneer 1507 was submitted.
In September, the European Court of Justice decided that the EU had unreasonably delayed a decision on Pioneer 1507.
Should ministers approve the crop it would provide the first challenge to Monsanto's dominance of the small European GM market.
The EU has only ever approved two other GM crops for cultivation - one strain of maize and a potato. However, the maize was later blocked by a court ruling.
While GM food continues to receive strong criticism from European environmental groups, the developing world has embraced GM food with amazing effects.
In the second half of the 20th century American biologist Norman Borlaug was responsible for the development of strains of wheat that boosted production and is credited with saving over a billion lives.
More recently, the development of golden rice allows farmers to grow crops which can provide up to 60 per cent of a child’s vitamin A daily requirements from only 50 grams of rice.
The World Health Organisation estimates that 170m to 230m children and 20m pregnant women are vitamin-A deficient and, as it weakens the immune system, that 1.9m to 2.7m die of it each year, more than from Aids, TB and malaria.
Yesterday, the European commissioner for Health Tonio Borg, said EU ministers needed to take the opportunity to act:
The Court's decision on maize 1507 confirms the urgency of re-launching discussions on the cultivation proposal made by the Commission back in 2010.
While a majority of EU ministers are hostile to GM there may not be enough to secure a qualified majority. However, the Commission indicated that if a "predominant majority" were against the proposal it seek to avoid approving the crop for cultivation.
Here's how the votes are set to stack up so far.
For
UK, Sweden, Finland, Spain and Estonia.
Against
France, Italy, Austria, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Denmark, Malta, Luxembourg, Greece, Romania and Hungary.
Abstain
Germany and Bulgaria.
Source: cityam

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

EU allows DuPont Pioneer's GM supercorn

EU allows DuPont Pioneer's GM supercorn

EU ministers have allowed the controversial cultivation of a new genetically modified crop, TC1507 corn from the US firm DuPont Pioneer. Opponents failed to muster enough support against the move.
In a vote Tuesday, European affairs ministers allowed for the introduction of TC1507. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) do not oppose the technology. However, Agriculture Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich, of the CDU's Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union, has said he would do whatever he could to make the introduction of GM corn into Germany more difficult.
"We do not want to have the cultivation of [TC1507] in Germany," Friedrich told Bayern2 radio.
The corn had been under discussion since last year. At the time, a court ordered ministers to decide the corn's fate by this week.
Although the European Food Safety Authority declared the variety safe, critics warn that TC1507 could endanger butterflies and moths and ultimately human health. The insect-resistant corn variety is intended for use as animal fodder and for biogas production plants.
‘No unified opinion'
Britain, Spain, Finland, Estonia and Sweden led the corn's "yes" bloc. France and Hungary led opposition to the maize. Germany's federal government abstained from the vote because of a pro-contra split among the 16 regional states, or Länder.
Environment Minister Barbara Hendricks of the center-left Social Democrats, was a firm contra. "As environment minister, I am against approval of genetically modified corn," Hendricks told the daily Neue Ruhr Zeitung on Tuesday for publication in the newspaper's Wednesday edition. She called it "unfortunate that there was no unified opinion" in the German government.
Ironically, then, it was Germany's own abstention that helped ensure the European Union would allow the corn, propagated by the US firm DuPont Pioneer. Ahead of the vote, EU Health Commissioner Tonio Borg had said that if the European EU's complex voting arithmetic were to produce a further deadlock among the ministers representing the bloc's 28 members, approval for TC1507 would be automatic.
The General Affairs Council ministers decided the issue on Tuesday under "qualified majority voting." This complex system weighs member states according to their size to ensure that a representative majority of the EU's 500 million population decides an issue, not the simple number of countries for or against.
In this instance, some 19 member states opposed, a clear majority, though they mustered just 210 votes out of a required 260 to block the measure - meaning that abstentions proved crucial. Belgium, Portugal and the Czech Republic, with 12 votes each, had also abstained, but even as a bloc the three countries could not have prevented the corn's passage.
Supercorn or Frankenfood?
Cultivation of genetically modified organisms (GMO) stokes suspicion in the EU and all over the world on health and environmental grounds. However, GMO enjoys a special place in the business of agriculture - especially in the United States.
GMO crops have won repeated safety approvals, and in Tuesday's debate several ministers noted that they are imported into the EU in large amounts and, having been fed to animals, had by now entered the human food chain. And there is the simple fact that GMO seeds can be carried on the winds from farm to farm and country to country, making personal preference or national law powerless to stop the spread.
Earlier Tuesday, Harald Ebner, the genetic expert of Germany's environmentalist Green party, had urged Merkel's coalition government to exercise a "no" vote in Brussels instead of abstaining. Referring to surveys that show 88 percent of Germans opposed genetically modified foodstuffs, Ebner had said that if the country were to abstain, Merkel would "show that she does not act according to the opinion of the people of Germany."
For one example, Till Backhaus, the agriculture minister in Germany's northern state of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, had warned against TC1507. "In my opinion there is a lack of basic accompanying studies to show what impact this plant will have on flora and fauna," Backhaus had said ahead of the vote.
Reuters, AFP, dpa

Supreme Court hears landmark GM crop case

Supreme Court hears landmark GM crop case

Two West Australian farmers are back in Perth's Supreme Court today in a case that could have consequences for the growing of genetically-modified crops. An organic farmer is suing his neighbour for loss of income and damages after his property was allegedly contaminated with the neighbour's genetically modified canola. ABC

DuPont Biotech Corn Moves Toward EU Approval

DuPont Biotech Corn Moves Toward EU Approval

Bloc Is Poised to Clear Its Second Genetically Modified Crop Despite Opposition From Member States

WSJ

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

No consensus over GMO foods safety – expert

No consensus over GMO foods safety – expert

Anti GMO-protesters stage a rally dressed as 'GM-Zombies' 
Anti GMO-protesters stage a rally dressed as 'GM-Zombies' 

Russian ecologists demand a complete moratorium on genetically modified products in the country. Members of the National Association for Genetic Safety fear that the decree allowing production of GMO food in Russia might come into effect on 1 June 2014. Earlier a group of Russian lawmakers also called for toughening requirements for GMO foods in the country. Voice of Russia's Jay Johnson has talked to Louise Payton, policy officer at the London Soil Association, who spoke of the absence of a general consensus on GMO safety and the advent of safer technologies.

Do you share Russian ecologists’ concerns about GMO crops?
Yes, we certainly do.
In this connection, do you think Russia and other countries need a GMO-crops moratorium as soon as possible?
Yes, what we are seeing is this concern is spreading across the world. For example, in China there are reports that there are bans of GMO staple crops such as rice, and in India, the state of Kerala has banned GMO crops from planting, and in Europe, where there are very strong regulations on GMOs, in practice there are only tiny amounts of GMOs growing in Spain, and that is it. So, at the moment GMO-planting bans are quite common.
While the safety of GMO foods for humans and animals is yet to be proven, some experiments suggest that they may, after all, be dangerous to human health. What are thoughts on this?
It is often said that there is a consensus over the safety of GMO foods. In fact, scientists have recently signed a letter saying that there is no consensus over the safety of GMO foods. So, in other words we just don’t know about whether or not GMO foods are safe.
Isn’t it true that there are large multinational companies such as Monsanto that actively pursue scientists that do wish to go against the general consensus and wish to study and see what the effects of these GMO foods are?
Yes, there are concerns. One of those scientists, he published studies which find that there are grounds for concern and was harassed as a result. It’s unclear whether that is the case. But certainly there is a lack of long-time feeding studies, so when the crops are fed to animals in the lab over their lifetime to see what effect is there, these studies are actually finding that there are causes for concern and the reasons why we should be worried, whereas the majority of studies that are taken by the corporations are in fact very short-term and don’t find effect.
Well, I was led to believe that the scientists that did not toe the multinationals’ lines were eventually driven out of the industry. Their project-funding dried up and basically they became non-existent inside of the industry. But let me put that aside for a minute. In your opinion, do you feel that GMO products should be totally banned?
At the moment there is not a single GMO plant, which is actually allowed for planting in commercial level in the EU, but what is actually interesting is that in practice this results in a very small amount of GMOs planted in the EU. So, essentially what we are seeing is a very-very strong regulation against GMO planting. It is unlikely that this is going to get any more prevalence.
What is your forecast on the situation surrounding GMOs? Will we see more GMO foods foray into the market in the near future?
We actually remain quite optimistic. Concerns over GMOs are not going away, and we are seeing a lot of progress and other, safer forms of technology. And that certainly needs more focus, these are actually being delivered already. So, for example marker-assisted selection is a form of biotechnology, which doesn’t actually shift the genes using genetic manipulation. Instead it uses a knowledge of plant and animal genomes to identify individuals with desirable genetic traits and crossbreed them, so essentially speeding up the process of breeding, which is something that GM has long promised and never really delivered upon. And we are already seeing things like draught-resistant plants .voiceofrussia

Supreme Court hears landmark GM crop case

Supreme Court hears landmark GM crop case

Two West Australian farmers are back in Perth's Supreme Court today in a case that could have consequences for the growing of genetically-modified crops. An organic farmer is suing his neighbour for loss of income and damages after his property was allegedly contaminated with the neighbour's genetically modified canola.
abc.net.au

GMO soybeans are bad for Mexico's beekeepers

GMO soybeans are bad for Mexico's beekeepers

bee closeup
Genetically modified organisms rarely stay put, as we've seen in cases where organic farmers have found their crops cross-bred with GMOs. Pollen has many ways of getting around, including the honey bee.
A new study published in Scientific Reports found that's bad news for beekeepers in Mexico. Mexico is the fourth largest producer of honey in the world, but the livelihoods of beekeepers could be threatened by GMO-soybeans, which makes its way into honey via pollen. The presence of GMO pollen in honey makes it difficult to export the product to Europe, where there's low-tolerance for genetically modified food. The contaminated honey can only be sold at substantially reduced rates if it's not rejected for sale altogether.
Scientists from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute found that soybean crops are the source of GMO pollen in honey from the Yucatan. The authors write that although it's widely believed that self-pollinating soy flowers are not visited by bees, there is clear evidence that this is not the case.
"Bee colonies act as extremely sensitive environmental indicators," said senior researcher David Roubik in a statement. "Bees from a single colony may gather nectar and pollen resources from flowers in a 200-square-kilometer area. With an economy based on subsistence agriculture associated with honey production, the social implications of this shift in the status of honey are likely to be contentious and have profound implications for beekeeping in general."
Although the researchers emphasized that all of the soybean pollen came from plants that have been approved for human consumption, the findings are another example of how GMOs may travel trough the environment in unpredictable ways. Treehugger

Margaret Badore

Editor / New York
Margaret Badore is a multimedia reporter who covers food, fashion, recycling and sustainable living in New York City. She earned her undergraduate degree in writing and environmental studies at Sarah Lawrence College and has a master's degree from Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. She previously worked as assistant editor at DietsInReview.com. Her work has appeared on Seventeen.com and in Real Detroit Weekly.
Margaret grew up outside of Detroit and has been figure skating since she was seven.

Is Wheat the Next Big GMO for Monsanto Company?

Is Wheat the Next Big GMO for Monsanto Company?

Monsanto is caught in the middle of a unique situation. The anti-GMO (genetically modified organism) movement could be a threat to existing soybean and corn seed sales, while the potential to commercialize genetically modified (GM) wheat could create a huge new market opportunity. Monsanto's decision to either double-down on GMOs or shy away from a jeopardized industry may shape the future of agricultural technology.
A look into the GMO business
Corn, soybeans, wheat, and cotton are the four largest crops in the U.S. in terms of total sales, and wheat is the only one not grown with GM seed. Worldwide, wheat is the most widely grown crop. Advances in wheat crop technology are believed by many to be one of the most promising ways to address food shortages and starvation across the developing world.
In spite of the promise of GM wheat, DuPont and Monsanto both abandoned R&D efforts focusing on GM wheat at the turn of the century due in large part to each company's own market analysis. The decisions made by both companies were likely influenced at the time primarily by the price of wheat and a fear that the somewhat risky R&D investments wouldn't provide a strong enough return. The price farmers pay for GM wheat would have been notably higher than the existing hybrid seeds available, and given the market price of wheat balanced with what may have only been marginally increased yields, farmers may not have been as receptive to GM wheat as they have been to other cash crops.

The other complicating factor from a decade ago that remains in play today is the lingering suspicion that the international community will be reluctant to purchase GM wheat. China made clear their unease with GM crops at the end of 2013 when the country rejected two shipments of distiller's grain that contained corn product originating from a particular genetically modified seed. Stringent regulations on GMOs in the European Union (EU) add to the concern of international acceptance for newly developed wheat strains.
Monsanto and Syngenta are among the agribusiness giants willing to make the investment in GM wheat in spite of the potential downfalls. Both companies have advanced to the field testing stage, though more extensive testing on crop yields and other desired properties are needed before a commercial release becomes reality. As the technology continues to develop, the public relations battle will rage on between concerned consumers and activist groups at odds with wheat growers and wheat trade groups who are putting their support behind biotech research on the crop.
Getting out of the GMO business
There has always been a portion of the public against GMOs since their less controversial beginnings, and the anti-GMO movement is continually gaining momentum. In spite of falling short on attempts to require labelling of GMO foodstuffs in California and Washington, anti-GMO proponents are gaining more public attention as major food companies like General Mills and Chipotle join the movement.
Monsanto makes more money from the sale of genetically modified seed than all of its major competitors combined, yet the company's seeds and genomics business is not its fastest growing business sector. Monsanto is far from exiting the GM seed business as demonstrated by continued research and development (R&D) investments into new seed technologies, but the company is also investing heavily into other technologies such as climate and field condition modeling tools to help farmers get the most return from their crops. As public sentiment grows increasingly wary of GMOs, Monsanto is creating alternative methods for remaining the dominant agricultural technology company that farmers will continue to rely on for maximizing their yields.
The takeaway
Demand for wheat is projected to increase 40% by 2030, and the expectations for growth are not going unnoticed by the biggest companies in agribusiness. Whether or not GM wheat sales start contributing to the earnings of Monsanto, DuPont, and Syngenta is more dependent on how the engineered crop is received internationally than it is on domestic considerations. Nonetheless, expect anti-GMO activists in the U.S. to make it well known that adding wheat to the growing list of genetically modified seeds will not happen without a fight.
dailyfinance

Monday, February 10, 2014

Russian ecologists push for GMO crops ban

Russian ecologists push for GMO crops ban

Russian ecologists are calling for a ban on GMO crops in Russia but fear that their calls may go unheeded despite assurances by top officials. At a recent Cabinet meeting, Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich proposed to ban crops containing genetically modified organisms.

“Unfortunately, Russian officials’ statements do not always lead to concrete steps. We, on our part, will continue to press for a GMO crops moratorium in Russia,” a source in the National Association for Genetic Security (NAGS) campaigning against GMO told reporters.
Speaking about the need for tighter control over the import of GM lines, which was also mentioned by Dvorkovich, the source said that there was virtually no control and that dozens of genetically modified products were already being imported into Russia.
“About two dozen GM lines are imported officially and used in the food industry. It should be borne in mind that their turnover also needs to be controlled,” the source said.
While the safety of GMO foods for humans and animals is yet to be proven, some experiments suggest that they may, after all, be dangerous to human health.
“During a research experiment performed in cooperation with the Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution of the Russian Academy of Sciences, we failed to obtain the third generation of laboratory animals fed on GMOs. This shows that there are definite risks to livestock,” the source said.
The NAGS is ready to do expert analysis for the Agriculture Ministry.
Dvorkovich backed the GMO crops ban.
“I support a ban on the cultivation of GMO crops in Russia. We must not allow that to happen,” he said at a government meeting on February 6.
As for GMO fodder imports, it’s a “separate issue”, Dvorkovich said. “We can either ban them straight away or introduce a transitional period”.
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev remarked that no database had been formed so far, and therefore it was hard to judge what was really happening.
“You mentioned crops. I won’t be surprised if we already have such crops,” the premier said. He instructed the Agriculture Ministry and related agencies to create a research base so that “we could understand what is imported, what’s been planted and what’s being produced”.
The Agriculture Ministry favors a conservative policy towards GMO food.
Voice of Russia, Interfax

Friday, February 7, 2014

EU Set to OK New GM Corn After Germany Drops Objection

EU Set to OK New GM Corn After Germany Drops Objection

A new genetically modified crop, US firm Pioneer's TC1507 corn, is set for approval in Europe next week. (Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images)



BRUSSELS, Feb 05, 2014 (AFP) -
A new genetically modified crop, US firm Pioneer's TC1507 corn, is set for approval in Europe next week after Germany dropped its objections, several EU sources told AFP Wednesday.
"Germany is moving from being against to abstaining" in a vote on the long-running controversy, said a source close to the dossier who asked not to be identified. A second source confirmed.
Ministers meeting in Brussels on Tuesday are to hand down a final decision on the cultivation of TC1507 corn after a European Court ruled late last year that the company's 2001 request for permission must be dealt with.
But the 28-nation bloc is badly divided over GM crops, and the EU's complex voting arithmetic has been at the heart of a deadlock on a decision.
The European Union's general affairs ministers will decide next week using qualified majority voting -- which is weighted to take account of the bigger states.
If there is no majority against due to one nation's abstention, then approval will be automatic, said the EU's Health Commissioner Tonio Borg on website Vieuws.
When the principle was last voted on in 2009, the heavyweights of Britain, France and Germany ended up cancelling each other out.
Asked to allow GM cultivation in the EU, but to leave space for national and even territorial opt-outs on non-health or environmental grounds, Britain was one of six backers.
France at that time was among 12 states opposed and Germany lead a group of nine that abstained but later switched sides.
Currently Britain, Spain and Sweden are leaders of the "yes" camp, France and Hungary lead opponents and sources say the position of Germany, whose government is divided, will not change the outcome.
There are another six applications for authorisation in the European Commission's pending tray.
To date GM crops have won repeated safety approvals from experts around the world despite environmentalists' fears that they will harm the ecosystem and ultimately human health.
The Pioneer crop, for instance, has already six times been given a clean bill of health by the European Food Standards Authority, although the EU is waiting for proof of modifications demanded of the company, and the six pending applications have also secured EFSA backing.
Environmentalists meanwhile accuse certain EFSA experts of enjoying links with the biotechnology industry that are too close.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

First African study on biodiversity in genetically modified maize finds insects abundant

First African study on biodiversity in genetically modified maize finds insects abundant

Previous studies from China, Spain, and the United States on genetically modified (GM) rice, cotton, and maize have concluded that the biodiversity of insects and related arthropods in GM crop fields was essentially the same as that among conventional crops. Now a new study from South Africa shows similar results.
The study is described in an article called "Comparative Diversity of Arthropods on Bt Maize and Non-Bt Maize in two Different Cropping Systems in South Africa," which appears in the February 2014 issue of Environmental Entomology.
"The aims of the study were to compile a checklist of arthropods that occur on maize in South Africa and to compare the diversity and abundance of arthropods and functional groups on Bt maize and non-Bt maize," the authors wrote. "Results from this short-term study indicated that abundance and diversity of arthropods in maize and the different functional guilds were not significantly affected by Bt maize, either in terms of diversity or abundance."
A total of 8,771 arthropod individuals, comprising 288 morphospecies, were collected from 480 plants sampled from Bt maize and non-Bt maize fields over a two-year period. The researchers found no significant differences in abundance or diversity in detritivores, herbivores, predators, or parasitoids.
"The results of our study indicate that arthropod diversity, even in high-input farming systems, is as high as in subsistence farming systems" said Dr. Johnnie van den Berg, a professor at North-West University and one of the co-authors of the article. "More recently, surveys of arthropod and plant beta-diversity inside and adjacent to maize fields have been completed during which 30,000 arthropods and 15,000 plant individuals were surveyed along a 1,000 kilometer transect. It seems that maize field diversity is homogenized and field margins had a high beta diversity," he added.
ScienceCodex

Monday, February 3, 2014

India should not succumb to prejudices against Bt crops: PM

India should not succumb to prejudices against Bt crops: PM

Batting for Bt crops, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today said India should not succumb to unscientific prejudices against genetically modified crops. 

"While safety must be ensured, we should not succumb to unscientific prejudices against Bt crops", he said in his address at the 101st Indian Science Congress here. 

Opinion has been sharply divided in India on introduction of genetically modified (GM) crops. There have been protests against such crops with several parties opposed to it. 

"Our government remains committed to promoting the use of these new technologies for agricultural development," Singh said, adding that the "use of biotechnology has great potential to improve yield". 

The Prime Minister called upon the scientific community to increase communication and engagement with society in explaining socially productive applications of technology alternatives and for improving the productivity of small and medium enterprises. 

In order to ensure food security and to improve land and water productivity, "we have to launch a national drive for an ever-green revolution," he said. 

"This will test the ingenuity of our agricultural scientists. Climate-resilient agriculture and modern bio-technological tools hold great promise. Use of biotechnology has great potential to improve yields," he said. 

The Science Congress will conclude on February 7 and will focus on the theme of 'Innovations in Science and Technology for Inclusive Development'. PTI

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Russian parliament to view draft law on banning GMO food production in Russia

Russian parliament to view draft law on banning GMO food production in Russia

Russian parliament to view draft law on banning GMO food production in Russia

The Russian State Duma (the parliament’s lower house) has worked out a draft law which would totally ban the production of genetically modified products in Russia and toughen the control over imports of such products.

The authors of the draft law – Evgeny Fyodorov from the United Russia party and an inter-fractional union “Rossiysky Suverinitet” (“Russian Sovereignty”) – are suggesting that the government should determine what amount of genetically modified substances the imported products may hold. Products in which this amount is exceeded should be banned for importing.
Mr. Fyodorov says his brainchild draft law does not suppose a total ban on imports of genetically modified products, but such imports should be under the government’s control.
He adds that the draft law will be introduced to the Duma for viewing in two weeks from now.
Voice of Russia, TASS

GMO food not unhealthy according to the science

GMO food not unhealthy according to the science

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Research reveals no instances of harm caused by GMP food

By Dr. Paul Martiquet  

Say GMO food in almost any group and you will instantly be regaled with tales of disaster, ‘frankenfood’ and the evils of multinational food companies. Is any of this reaction based on fact? Science?
In fact, most people are not even sure what genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are, yet they debate vehemently that they represent a horrible turn for humanity and the earth. Just type the term into any search engine and almost everything you see is negative.
Unfortunately, many people have formed their opinions based on hearsay and their ‘gut feeling’ that it must be bad. Most of these opinions have been shaped by a combination of several non-scientific forces, including a mistrust of big corporations, fear of unchecked technology and gut-level queasiness.
The failure of this anti-GMO bias is the limiting effect it has on our ability to grow healthful food most efficiently at a time when a growing population make that goal all the more urgent.
Let’s start with a definition. Wikipedia tells us that a “genetically modified organism is an organism whose genetic material has been altered using genetic engineering techniques.” The technical, legal term is ‘living modified organism’ reflecting that these are living things whose DNA has been altered, often with the addition of a gene from a distant species, to produce a desired trait.
Rebuffing many of the cherished assumptions held by anti-GM folks should be easy: just use the facts. For example, GMO food uses less insecticides and chemicals. Another belief is that GMO food only benefits big companies, but truth is that farmers needing fewer inputs also accrue the benefits.
At one time ‘Terminator Technology’ was supposed to have been created to make plants sterile so they could not produce useable seeds. It turns out that hybrid seeds did that long ago; Terminator never happened.
GMO food is believed to be dangerous. In fact, it is safer and more precise than conventional breeding using mutagenesis, for example. But GMO food just moves a couple of genes, whereas conventional breeding mucks about with the entire genome in a trial and error way.
Without complete information, it’s hard to be open-minded and, unfortunately, that is where most opinion is derived. Indeed, there is an established global consensus which holds that existing genetically engineered crops are no riskier than others, and have provided some tangible benefits.

No evidence of harm from GMO food

Take the US National Academy of Sciences, the premier scientific body in the US, which has repeatedly found genetically modified food safe, and that genetically engineered crops are kinder to the environment than non-genetically engineered crops. Or the American Medical Association which consistently found genetically modified foods as safe to eat as any other food.
The biggest ever survey of scientific information on GMO food was carried out by a group of Italian scientists in 2013. They looked at 1,783 published research papers, reviews, and reports on GMO food and found no evidence of harm.
Looking at the GMO food situation without prejudice suggests that underlying the debate is the fallacy of natural is good and artificial is bad. But this is a fallacy because there are plenty of entirely natural poisons. For the organic movement, this naturalistic fallacy is elevated into a central guiding principle.
But consider this: Over the past 15 years, some three trillion meals containing GMO food ingredients have been consumed without a single substantiated case of harm. Meanwhile, dozens of people have died after eating organic crops contaminated with E. coli.
Dr. Paul Martiquet is the Medical Health Officer for Rural Vancouver Coastal Health including Powell River, the Sunshine Coast, Sea-to-Sky, Bella Bella and Bella Coola. Beacon News