Farmers Were Guaranteed Better Returns If They Grew Genetically Modified Food




In 1996 Monsanto introduced commercially a genetically engineered cotton with in-seed insect-protection against the cotton bollworm. In 1997 Monsanto introduced commercially a genetically modified corn which had in-built protection from the European corn borer. Also, that year, a new genetically engineered cotton variety which had both bollworm resistance and glyphosate tolerant properties.

Farmers were promised higher returns and lower costs and thus more profit if they grew these transgenic plants. Have the biotech companies been able to deliver on these assurances.

India.

According to Andrew Malone writing in the Daily Mail, it is true what Prince Charles said about thousands of farmers in the Maharashtra state, India, committing suicide after running up large debts due to the crop failure of transgenic pest proof varieties of Bt cotton. The farmers were promised that the transgenic Bt cotton would not need pesticides, would be free of disease and insect pests. Instead their cotton was devastated by the parasite pink bollworm. This was because the cotton is resistant to green bollworm but not pink bollworm.

Though the yields were lower some forty percent of farmers did manage to make a small profit, as compared to the sixty percent of farmers who made a loss, from growing the Bt cotton. But because the quality of the cotton is poor, the fibres are shorter, farmers are paid less per kilo. So farmers who grow Bt cotton have smaller yields and get lesser returns on the cotton they do produce. Why would any farmer desire to grow transgenic Bt cotton.

To make matters worse the seeds sold to the farmers are "terminator" seeds. This means that the Bt cotton plants only beget infertile seeds. So even if the farmer does manage to gain even a low yield of Bt cotton he can not use these seeds to plant next years crop but has to buy more seeds every year and these transgenic seeds are very pricey.

South Africa.

Farmers in three provinces -- North West, Free State and Mpumalanga, in South Africa -- have had up to eighty percent crop failure with three varieties of genetically engineered corn. Monsanto blamed the crop failures on a mistake in the laboratory, made during the seed fabrication process. Opponents of transgenic food, however, say that the science behind genetic modification is amiss.

Super-weeds.

Another inconvenience of growing transgenic crops that are made to be tolerant of glyphosate is that over time when the plants are sprayed with the herbicide, the weeds also become resistant to the weed killer. According to The International Survey of Herbicide Resistant Weeds there are now nine weed species, in different areas within the United States, that are resistant to the glyphosate herbicide.

When you consider that glyphosate is one of the most damaging and most popular of all herbicides then once a weed species becomes tolerant to it, it may be challenging to find a herbicide that will kill the weeds but leave the food crop standing.

When farmers are finding their land infested with these super-weeds they are been advised to increase the amount of glyphosate they normally use on the food plants and if this does not clear up the problem they are advised to add a assortment of different herbicides. So farmers end up by spraying the food crops with many different types of herbicides including ample amounts of glyphosate. Using more herbicides means more expense and lower returns.

Georgia, United States.

The state of Georgia is being invaded, not by Triffids, but by pigweed (Palmer Amaranth). Over one-hundred thousand acres of farmland in Georgia is badly infested with this glyphosate tolerant superweed says weed technical expert Stanley Culpepper from the University of Georgia.

Pigweed is a fast-growing, drought-resistant, incredibly prolific weed that smothers the cotton plants starving them of sunlight, nutrients and water. The infestation has got so bad that some farmers are weeding their Bt cotton plants by hand. Other farmers are giving up and abandoning their land to the weeds.

Long Term Trends.

The evidence seems to suggest that growing genetically modified crops will eventually lead to lower yields and higher expenditure, which means lower profits.


 

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