3. Monsanto's Genetically Modified seeds Threaten
world Production
Sources: MOJO WIRE Title: "A Seedy Business" http://www.motherjones.com/news_wire
/broydo.html http://www.motherjones.corn/news_wire
/usda-inc.html, Date: April 27, 1998, Author: Leora Broydo; THIRD
WORLD RESURGENCE #92 Title: "New Patent Aims to Prevent Farmers
From Saving Seed," Author: Chakravarthi Raghavan; GLOBAL PESTICIDE
CAMPAIGNER and EARTH ISLAND JOURNAL, Title: "Terminator Seeds Threaten
an End to Farming," Date: June 1998, Fall 1998, Authors: Hope Shand
and Pat Mooney; THE ECOLOGIST, Title: "Monsanto: A Checkered History,"
and "Revolving Doors: Monsanto and the Regulators," Date:
September/October 1998, Vol. 28, No. 5, Author: Brian Tokar
SSU Censored
Researchers: Tom Ladegaard, Amber Manfree, and Amy Loucks
SSU Faculty Evaluators:
Paul Benko and Tom Lough
Over the 12,000 years that humans have been farming,
a rich tradition of seed saving has developed. Men and women choose seeds from
the plants that are best adapted to their own locale and trade them within the
community, enhancing crop diversity and success rates. All this may change in
the next four to five years. Monsanto Corporation has been working to consolidate
the world seed market and is now poised to introduce new genetically engineered
seeds that will produce only infertile seeds at the end of the farming cycle.
Farmers will no longer be able to save seeds from year to year and will be forced
to purchase new seeds from Monsanto each year.
On March 3, 1998, Delta Land and Pine Company, a large American cotton
seed company, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced
that they had been awarded a patent on a technique that genetically
disables a seed's ability to germinate when planted a second season.
This patent covers not only the cotton and tobacco varieties, but, potentially,
all cultivated crops. Scarcely two months after the patent was awarded,
Monsanto, the world's third largest seed corporation and second largest
agrochemical corporation, began the process of acquiring Delta Land
and Pine and with it the rights to this new technology.
It is noteworthy that the USDA stands to earn 5 percent
royalties of net sales if this technology is commercialized. Historically the
USDA has received government money for research aimed at benefiting farmers, but
recently the USDA has been turning more and more often to private companies for
funding. As a result, for the first time in history, research is being done for
the benefit of corporations, sometimes in direct opposition to farmers' interests.
In
an interview with Leora Broydo, Melvin Oliver, USDA researcher on the patent-producing
technique, stated that the research is a way to put "billions of dollars
spent on research back into the system." When Broydo called back to ask exactly
whose billions would be recouped by USDA's patent, Oliver said he had been instructed
not to speak to the press any further.
Dubbed "Terminator technology"
by Hope Shand of the Rural Advancement Foundation International (RAFI), Monsanto's
new seeds have diverse implications, including the disruption of traditional farming
practices around the world, the altering of the earth's biodiversity, and possible
impacts on human health.
Monsanto has euphemistically called the process
by which seeds are disabled the "technology protection system." A primary
objective of Terminator technology is to grant and protect corporate rights to
charge fees for patents on products that are genetically modified. Terminator
technology offers no advantage by itself, but when coupled with the production
of the strongest, highest yielding seeds, farmers may be compelled to buy single-season
plants. Due to the nature of modern farming, many farmers will have little choice.
Up to this point the boldest attempt at policing crops has been made by Monsanto,
who hires Pinkerton agents to ferret out wayward American farmers who save patented
soybean seeds for reuse or trade. However, this method is minimally effective
in foreign markets.
Genetic engineering is still in its early stages and
the effects of flooding the environment with extensive transgenic monocrops are
unpredictable. Traits from genetically engineered plants can sometimes be passed
on to wild relatives in the area, causing genetic pollution, which has the potential
to alter ecosystems in unknown ways for an indefinite period of time.
Terminator
plants, if introduced on a wide scale, will effectively constrict worldwide crop
diversity by preventing farmers from engaging in the seed selection and cross
breeding that has, for thousands of years, given them the ability to adapt crops
to local conditions. Crop uniformity increases vulnerability to pests and disease
and heightens the potential for mass famine.
UPDATE BY AUTHORS HOPE SHAM AHD PAT MOONEY: "RAFI's story
on Terminator seed technology alerted the world to a dangerous new genetic
technology that threatens to eliminate the right of farmers to save
seeds from their harvest. This technology offers no agronomic benefit
to farmers -- it is designed simply to increase seed industry profits
by forcing farmers to return to the commercial seed market every year.
"Terminator technology is a threat to global food security because
it is aimed for use in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, where over 1.4
billion people -- primarily poor farmers -- depend on farm-saved seed.
"There is an avalanche of public opposition to this technology.
When we learned that Monsanto had entered into neg-otiations with the
USDA to obtain an exclusive license on the Terminator patent, we launched
an international email protest campaign on our Web site. In recent months
over 3,500 people have written to U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Dan
Glickman from 60 countries, urging him to cease negotiations with Monsanto,
abandon research on Terminator, and withdraw patent claims that are
pending in over 87 countries.
"The specter of genetic seed sterilization is so serious that
the world's largest network of agricultural researchers adopted a policy
in October 1998 prohibiting the use of the technology in its Third World
plant-breeding programs. India's agriculture minister says he will ban
the import of Terminator seeds because of the potential harm Indian
agriculture. Terminator technology is on the 1999 agenda of two United
Nations agencies. Civil society organizations and national governments
aim to reject the Terminator patent on the basis of public morality."
For more information: http://www.rafi.org.
UPDATE BY AUTHOR BRIAN TOKAR: "The Ecologist magazine's
special issue on Monsanto has helped crystallize a growing, worldwide
opposition to the company's aggressive promotion of its genetically
engineered crop varieties. When The Ecologist's printer of 26 years
refused to release the magazine and discarded 14,000 copies, citing
fears of a libel suit, the ensuing controversy helped contribute to
Monsanto's rapidly deteriorating image all across Europe and worldwide.
Public controversies over genetically engineered foods have escalated
throughout Europe, as well as in Latin America, East Asia, and elsewhere.
A farmers' movement in southern India burned test plots of Monsanto's
pesticide-secreting cotton in November of 1998, calling for a worldwide
campaign to 'Cremate Monsanto.'
"The Ecologist story has received little play in the United States,
outside of alternative outlets such as Z Magazine, the Multinational
Monitor, and various electronic mailing lists for opponents of biotechnology.
Still, opposition is growing here as well, and Monsanto has faced declining
stock values and the collapse of its planned merger with the pharma-ceutical
giant American Home Products.
Farmers report persistent problems with Monsanto's genetically engineered
corn and cotton varieties, and there is growing evidence that biotech
crops contaminate neighboring fields with their pollen. A new coalition
of biotech opponents and environmental activists in the Northeast has
called for a nationwide campaign against the sale of genetically engineered
seeds."
CONTACTS:
New England Resistance Against Genetic Engineering
c/o Institute for Social Ecology
P.O. Box 89, Plainfield, VT 05667
(802) 454-8493
briant@earth.goddard.edu
Biodevastation Network
c/o Edmonds Institute 20319-92nd Avenue, West Edmonds, WA 98020
(425) 775-5383
beb@igc.org
Gateway Green Alliance P.O. Box 8094, St. Louis, MO 63156
(314) 727-8554
fitzdon@aol.com
London-based genetics e-mail list:
genetics@gn.apc.org
http://www.dmac.co.uk/gen/genup.html
Campaign for Food Safety
http://www purefood.org
Rural Advancement Foundation International
http://www.rafi.ca
Union of Concerned Scientists
http://www.ucsusa.org/agriculture/
biotech.html
International Center for Technology Assessment
http://www.icta.org