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'Golden' Rice Is Tarnished

By Anuradha Mittal, AlterNet
July 23, 2003

The agricultural biotechnology industry hopes we will overlook fundamental
questions about genetically engineered food. Yet as of today, nobody has
convincingly assured consumers that genetically altered foods are
beneficial,
or even safe, for humans and the environment. The latest example of hype
versus hope is the claim that a new, genetically modified rice will prevent
blindness in malnourished children, in India and other parts of Asia.
Unfortunately, it probably can't.

When opposition to genetically altered food began to develop in the United
States, the industry mounted a $52 million public relations campaign to
extol
the virtues of biotechnology, especially the new rice, for improving world
health. Corporate PR promised to put the so-called "golden rice" in bowls
across Asia.

This altered rice was given the honorific "golden" because a daffodil gene
was
inserted, giving it an orange color. This gene produces beta-carotene in the
rice, a nutrient humans can convert into vitamin A. Because vitamin A
deficiency contributes to blindness and infectious diseases among the poor
in
developing countries, golden rice was aggressively advertised as a miracle
grain to end suffering for millions around the world. More importantly,
golden
rice was the first of several foods the biotech industry said would make it
possible to eradicate world hunger.

All told, more than $100 million went into developing golden rice, not
including the money spent by biotech companies to advertise and promote this
product to the American public, overseas governments and international
health
officials. For the moment, however, the only golden rice in the world
resides
in a Swiss greenhouse, and that's where it should stay until it truly
measures
up to claims.

Developers of this grain have been vague on how much golden rice a person
must
eat to get enough beta-carotene for the recommended daily vitamin A needs. B
ut
an analysis of industry data shows that in order for those most vulnerable
to
blindness - infants - to get enough vitamin A from breast milk, their
mothers
would have to consume almost 40 pounds of cooked rice per day.

Similarly, an adult male would need to eat 18 pounds of cooked golden rice
to
meet his daily vitamin A requirement. In other words, if golden rice were
simply substituted for a daily diet of conventional white rice, a child or
adult would receive only 8 percent of their daily vitamin A requirement.
Even
so, the body can convert beta-carotene into vitamin A only if adequate
amounts
of fat and protein are also part of the diet. Generally speaking,
malnourished
people, by definition, lack fat and protein in their diets.

But this raises another, even more fundamental question that the developers
of
golden rice apparently overlooked. Virtually all Asian populations eat white
rice. Brown rice, readily available and considerably higher in essential
nutrients, has never caught on throughout Asia. Why, then, do biotechnology
promoters assume their rice will prove popular?

The answer is wishful thinking. Ninety percent of the world's rice is grown
and consumed in Asia, making this region a vast potential market for a
genetically engineered version of the crop. Asian agricultural officials are
highly suspicious of golden rice, however, fearing that it will shift
control
over food security from villages to multinational corporations.

World health officials have concluded that poverty, not a lack of modern
technology, is the fundamental cause of malnourishment. And they point out
that nutritional deficits can be easily and cheaply corrected with a more
varied diet. Green leafy vegetables, oranges and red palm oil all are high
in
vitamin A.

Any lingering illusion of altruism on the part of biotechnology companies
dims
when the subject of patents arises. By the middle of 1998, half the world's
patents on genetically engineered rice were owned by just 13 companies. In
the
case of golden rice itself, Zeneca, the company that developed the vitamin-A
gene plant, now holds exclusive commercial rights, which applies not just to
rice but to all future crops that might carry the gene.

Contrary to the biotech industry's lofty claims, the aggressive promotion of
golden rice does not spring from corporate generosity. Defying all logic,
they
are saying to Americans, "Accept largely untested, genetically altered
ingredients in your food, because people are going blind in India."

As an Indian, I feel strongly that neither Americans nor Indians need eat
these risky and unnecessary products. Healthy, readily available
alternatives
are abundant.


Anuradha Mittal is co-director of Food First/The Institute for Food and
Development Policy (www.foodfirst.org).




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