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By : Viktor Stephen, COO, Business Mashups LLC
Industry : Technology Consulting Functional Area : India
Activity:  5 comments  388 views  last activity : 07 06 2010 20:18:04 +0000
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Biotech Companies Exploit Food Crisis by Raising GM Seed and Pesticide Prices, Record Profits Projected

Biotech Propaganda Distracts Attention from Real Solutions for Small Farmers

Washington D.C., February 11, 2009 - A new report released today by the Center for Food Safety and Friends of the Earth International warned that genetically modified (GM) crops are benefiting biotech food giants instead of the worldís hungry population, which is projected to increase to 1.2 billion by the year 2025 due to the global food crisis.

The report explains how biotech firms like Monsanto are exploiting the dramatic rise in world grain prices that are responsible for the global food crisis by sharply increasing the prices of GM seeds and chemicals they sell to farmers, even as hundreds of millions go hungry.

The findings of the report support a comprehensive United Nationsí assessment of world agriculture ñ the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) - which in 2008 concluded that GM crops have little potential to alleviate poverty and hunger in the world. IAASTD experts recommended instead low-cost, low-input agroecological farming methods.

"GM crops are all about feeding the biotech giants, not the worldís poor," said Nnimmo Bassey, executive director of Friends of the Earth Nigeria and chair of Friends of the Earth International.

"GM seeds and the pesticides used with them are much too expensive for Africaís small farmers. Those who promote this technology in developing countries are completely out of touch with reality," he added.

"U.S. farmers are facing dramatic increases in the price of GM seeds and the chemicals used with them," said Bill Freese, science policy analyst at the US-based Center for Food Safety and co-author of the report. "Farmers in any developing country that welcomes Monsanto and other biotech companies can expect the same fate - sharply rising seed and pesticide costs, and a radical decline in the availability of conventional seeds," he added.

GM seeds cost from two to over four times as much as conventional, non-GM seeds, and the price disparity is increasing. From 80% to over 90% of the soybean, corn and cotton seeds planted in the U.S. are GM varieties. Thanks to GM trait fee increases, average U.S. seed prices for these crops have risen by over 50% in just the past two to three years.

Exploitation of the food crisis has been extremely profitable for Monsanto, by far the dominant player in GM seeds. Goldman Sachs recently projected that Monsanto's net income (after taxes) would triple from $984 million to $2.96 billion from 2007 to 2010.

The exorbitant cost of GM seeds is not the only problem. The vast majority of GM crops are not grown by or destined for the world's poor, but instead are soybeans and corn used to feed animals, generate biofuels, or produce highly processed food products consumed mostly in rich countries.

The report documents that nearly 90% of the global area planted GM crops in 2008 was found in just 6 countries with highly industrialized, export-oriented agricultural sectors in North and South America, with the U.S., Argentina and Brazil responsible for 80% of GM crops. The United States alone produced 50% of the world's GM crops in 2008.

Despite more than a decade of hype, the biotechnology industry has not introduced a single GM crop with increased yield, enhanced nutrition, drought-tolerance or salt-tolerance. In fact, the biotechnology industry's own figures show that 85% of all GM crop acreage worldwide in 2008 was planted with herbicide-tolerant crops. Herbicide-tolerant GM crops - chiefly Monsanto's Roundup Ready varieties used with Monsanto's Roundup herbicide - have increased overall use of chemical weed killers. Roundup prices in the U.S. have more than doubled in the past two years.

Meanwhile, biotech propaganda has obscured the huge potential of low-cost agroecological and organic techniques to increase food production and alleviate hunger in developing countries. The report mentions several such projects, such as push-pull maize farming, practiced by 10,000 farmers in east Africa. The enormously successful push-pull system controls weed and insect pests without chemicals, increases maize production, and raises the income of smallholder farmers.

The report Who benefits from GM crops 20092 is available online at: http://www.foei.org/en/publications/pdfs/gmcrops2009full.pdf

An executive summary is online at: http://www.foei.org/en/publications/pdfs/gmcrops2009exec.pdf

The Center for Food Safety is national, non-profit, membership organization founded in 1997 to protect human health and the environment by curbing the use of harmful food production technologies and by promoting organic and other forms of sustainable agriculture. On the web at: http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org

Friends of the Earth International is the world's largest grassroots environmental network, with 77 national member groups, some 5,000 local activist groups on every continent, and over 2 million members and supporters around the world. www.foei.org


 Top Comment : Dhananjay Raturi   | 07 26 2009 10:09:19 +0000
Every citizen must know this.
 
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5 comments on "GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS FEED BIOTECH GIANTS, NOT THE POOR"
  Commented by  Viktor Stephen, COO, Business Mashups LLC    | 07 27 2009 10:22:55 +0000
Ms. Bindu, informed opinion from insiders like yourself could probably change things for the future. Wish you good luck. 
  Commented by  Bindu Narayan, Product Development Manager, Care Biomedicals    | 07 27 2009 10:19:16 +0000
Rating : +1 
Seriously being from this field, really didn't know that companies are doing like this to make profits, when there is serious shortage, they are increasing the prices for their seeds and chemicals that are used in farming by many..And what more interesting is i have a friend who works in the above mentioned company, but surely she would be not knowing such thing is happening where Poor farmers are made to pay more..
  Commented by  Dhananjay Raturi, Head of the Department, XYZ    | 07 26 2009 13:26:28 +0000
I don't think GM seeds are a good idea.It's a 'seed lock-in' one gets perpetually bound to.

DDT,Fertilizers got into the farming process and we have started feeling the negative impacts of those introductions.
Not only did they run tangential to the 'green revolution' objective, but became permanent items in Government subsidy.

We must stop another evil from adding up to the list

  Commented by  Makrand Bhave, Sales Promotion Manager, XYZ    | 07 26 2009 12:35:25 +0000
Rating : +1 
Highly informative. So whats the fate of these GM seeds?? Will they be made cheaper for a real time global purchase?? 
  Commented by  Dhananjay Raturi, Head of the Department, XYZ    | 07 26 2009 10:09:19 +0000
Rating : +2 
Every citizen must know this.
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