The Congress of Racial
Equality’s recent conference, video and commentary on agricultural biotechnology
presented personal testimonials from African farmers whose lives have been
improved by genetically modified (GM) crops, impressive data on progress,
and a message of hope for poor, malnourished people in developing countries.
The response has been overwhelmingly positive.
But not from all quarters. Predictably, anti-GM zealots continue to offer
a steady stream of unsupported and unsupportable invective. To hear them
tell it, biotechnology is a “scourge” that will do nothing to save lives
or reduce poverty and malnutrition. “Evil multinationals” like Monsanto are
determined to impose “a new form of slavery” that will “displace” poor people
from their lands.
The fear-mongering would be hilarious, if the hate-GM campaign didn’t have
such tragic consequences for a world where 800 million people are chronically
malnourished, and 3 billion struggle to survive on less than $700 a year.
A healthy dose of facts is in order.
GM crops are created with great care in laboratories, using techniques that
are far more precise than anything previously. They are tested repeatedly
and are regulated by the EPA, FDA, USDA and other agencies. Americans have
collectively eaten over a trillion servings of food containing one or more
GM ingredients, without a single case of harm. Indeed, as Greenpeace co-founder
Dr. Patrick Moore and others have demonstrated,
every single claim of risk to people or the environment -- from monarch butterfly
deaths to destabilized insect ecology, diminished biodiversity and dangers
to human health -- has been refuted by scientific studies.
And yet, radical groups like Greenpeace and the Sierra Club continue to place
ultra-precaution against minor, distant, theoretical risks to healthy, well-fed
Westerners above the very real, immediate, life-threatening risks faced by
our Earth’s poorest and most malnourished people.
Thankfully, despite all the invectives, farmers the world over are increasingly
turning to GM technology, planting 200 million acres last year. They don’t
for a minute believe ag biotech is a magic bullet that will make them rich
or solve the world’s hunger problems. But they know it dramatically increases
crop yields, farm profits and people’s nutrition -- while reducing pesticide
use, crop losses to drought, insects and disease, and the amount of land
that will be needed to feed a world population that is expected to hit 9
billion by 2050, before leveling off.
If the
world had to rely on organic farming or 1960s agricultural technologies to
produce as much food as it actually did in 2000, notes Dr. Norman Borlaug,
Nobel Prize laureate for the first Green Revolution, “we would have had to
double the amount of land under cultivation.” Millions of acres of
forest and grassland habitats would have been slashed, burned and plowed
for subsistence farming -- or millions more people would have starved. As
human populations grow, the problem would only worsen. Instead, thanks to
biotechnology, farmers can grow far more from the same acreage, thereby preserving
habitats and fostering biodiversity and nutrition.
Bt cotton
has allowed Chinese farmers to reduce their pesticide use by 50 to 70 percent
-- while increasing their yields by 25 to 66 percent, and their incomes by
US$300 per hectare (US$120 per acre). Since most of these chemicals were
applied via hand spraying, they’ve also slashed accidental pesticide poisoning.
Farmers in India, Africa and Latin America have had similar experiences.
Bt plants also eliminate pests like corn borers, which chew pathways for
dangerous fungal contaminants. They thus reduce rot and waste -- and mycotoxins
that cause fatal diseases in animals, and cancer, reduced immunity and birth
defects in humans. By contrast, organic corn meals purchased right off British
supermarket shelves had fumonisin levels up to 50 times higher than conventional
or biotech corn -- and 20 to 30 times the allowable limits set by UK law.
Many organic fruits and vegetables also have e-coli bacterial levels sharply
higher than conventionally grown crops.
By reducing the need to cultivate for weed control, herbicide-tolerant crops
greatly decrease soil erosion (by nearly a billion tons per year), keeping
sediment out of lakes and streams. No-till farming also reduces fuel use
(by some 300 million gallons of gasoline a year), and increases carbon dioxide
uptake by soils -- good news for anyone worried about global warming.
Increased crop yields, in turn, mean African farmers can grow enough crops
to feed livestock, so they can regularly include protein in their diets for
perhaps the first time in their lives.
But anti-GM activists won’t let anything as silly as facts affect their misplaced
resolve to stop biotech progress in its tracks. A typical ploy is to portray
Canadian farmer Percy Schmeiser as a victim, sued by the villainous Monsanto
to enforce its intellectual property rights, after GM crops had “adventitiously
appeared” on his land.
It’s a compelling story -- if you ignore the facts and court decisions. In
affirming Schmeiser’s conviction for patent violation, Canada’s Supreme Court
observed that it defied belief that 90 percent of his crop (1,030 acres or
1.5 square miles) was “adventitiously” converted to biotech varieties by
seeds or pollen blown in from neighboring fields. As his own field hand testified,
Schmeiser had carefully collected and treated seeds from biotech canola grown
on a small section of his farm. He then planted those seeds in nine separate
fields. He got caught, Monsanto sued, and his phony defense got laughed out
of court. “Percy Schmeiser,” the court noted, “was not an innocent bystander.”
Yet another canard is the claim that modern farming practices will displace
farmers. In 1780, over 95 percent of Americans were farmers; today about
3 percent are, and they grow many times more food per acre than their ancestors
ever dreamed was possible. Those who abandoned farms were “displaced” to
cities. But would their descendents -- including urban environmentalists
-- prefer to give up their modern comforts and return to the era of sunup-to-sundown,
back-breaking farm labor?
As Grandmother Driessen used to say, the only good thing about the good old
days is that they’re gone. Kenya’s Akinye Arunga puts it this way: “Cute
indigenous lifestyles simply mean indigenous poverty, indigenous malnutrition,
indigenous disease and childhood death. I don’t wish this on my worst enemy,
and I wish our so-called friends would stop imposing it on us.”
Unfortunately, radical activists are doing exactly that. They are preventing
poor Africans from acquiring modern farming methods, adequate electricity,
and pesticides to control malaria. Their callous ideology is certainly an
efficient form of “all-natural” population control. But it violates Third
World people’s basic human rights to nutrition, and life itself.
As to “enslaving” farmers, ag biotech actually frees them from much of the
drudgery of subsistence farming. It cuts the time they have to spend in fields,
doubles or triples their yields, feeds their families (and their neighbors’
families), and puts money in their pockets. As an African Patrick Henry might
say, If this be slavery, make the most of it.
But the anti-biotech campaigners charge ahead, oblivious to the suffering
and malnutrition they are helping to perpetuate, and to the hopes and dreams
they are suffocating.
The campaign underscores the adage that nothing in the world is more dangerous
than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity -- except perhaps deliberate
eco-manslaughter. No wonder Dr. Moore says the greens’ opposition to biotechnology
“clearly exposes their intellectual and moral bankruptcy.”
Paul
Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Congress of Racial Equality, Committee
For A Constructive Tomorrow and Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise,
and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power, Black Death. Cyril Boynes, Jr. is CORE's director of international programs.
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