And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Activist Mailing List - http://get.to/activist

Monsanto's expanding monopolies into water supply


http://www.hinduonline.com/today/stories/05012524.htm

THE HINDU, Saturday, May 01, 1999

By Vandana Shiva

(The writer is Director of the Research Foundation for Science, 
Technology and Ecology, New Delhi.)

OVER THE past few years, Monsanto, a chemical firm, has positioned 
itself as an agricultural company through control over seed - the 
first link in the food chain. Monsanto now wants to control water, the 
very basis of life. 

In 1996, Monsanto bought the biotechnology assets of Agracetus, a 
subsidiary of W. R. Grace, for $150 million and Calgene, a 
California-based plant biotechnology company for $340 million. In 
1997, Monsanto acquired Holden seeds, the Brazilian seed company, 
Sementes Agrocerus and Asgrow. In 1998, it purchased Cargill's seed 
operations for $1.4 billion and bought Delta and Pine land for $1.82 
billion and Dekalb for $2.3 billion. 

In India, Monsanto has bought MAHYCO, Maharashtra Hybrid Company, EID 
Parry and Rallis. Mr. Jack Kennedy of Monsanto has said,

 "we propose to penetrate the Indian agricultural sector in a big way. 
 MAHYCO is a good vehicle." 

According to Mr. Robert Farley of Monsanto,

 "what you are seeing is not just a consolidation of seed companies, 
 it's really a consolidation of the entire food chain. Since water is 
 as central to food production as seed is, and without water life is 
 not possible, Monsanto is now trying to establish its control over 
 water. During 1999, Monsanto plans to launch a new water business, 
 starting with India and Mexico since both these countries are facing 
 water shortages."

Monsanto is seeing a new business opportunity because of the emerging 
water crisis and the funding available to make this vital resource 
available to people. As it states in its strategy paper,

 "first, we believe that discontinuities (either major policy changes 
 or major trendline breaks in resource quality or quantity)  are 
 likely, particularly in the area of water and we will be 
 well-positioned via these businesses to profit even more 
 significantly when these discontinuities occur. Second, we are 
 exploring the potential of non-conventional financing (NGOs, World 
 Bank, USDA, etc.) that may lower our investment or provide local 
 country business-building resources." Thus, the crisis of pollution 
 and depletion of water resources is viewed by Monsanto as a business 
 opportunity. For Monsanto, "sustainable development" means the 
 conversion of an ecological crisis into a market of scarce resources. 
 "The business logic of sustainable development is that population 
 growth and economic development will apply increasing pressure on 
 natural resource markets. These pressures and the world's desire to 
 prevent the consequences of these pressures, if unabated, will create 
 vast economic opportunity - when we look at the world through the 
 lens of sustainability, we are in a position to see current and 
 foresee impending-resource market trends and imbalances that create 
 market needs. We have further focussed this lens on the resource 
 market of water and land. These are the markets that are most 
 relevant to us as a life sciences company committed to delivering 
 food, health and hope to the world, and there are markets in which 
 there are predictable sustainability challenges and therefore 
 opportunities to create business value."

Monsanto plans to earn revenues of $420 million and a net income of 
$63 million by 2008 from its water business in India and Mexico. By 
2010, about 2.5 billion people in the world are projected to lack 
access to safe drinking water. At least 30 per cent of the population 
in China, India, Mexico and the U.S. is expected to face severe water 
stress. By 2025, the supply of water in India will be 700 cubic km per 
year, while the demand is expected to rise to 1,050 units. 

Control over this scarce and vital resource will, of course, be a 
source of guaranteed profits. As John Bastin of the European Bank of 
Reconstruction and Development has said,

 "Water is the last infrastructure frontier for private investors."

Monsanto estimates that providing safe water is a several billion 
dollar market. It is growing at 25 to 30 per cent in rural communities 
and is estimated to rise to $300 million by 2000 in India and Mexico. 
This is the amount currently spent by NGOs for water development 
projects and local government water supply schemes and Monsanto hopes 
to tap these public finances for providing water to rural communities 
and convert water supply into a market. The Indian Government spent 
over $1.2 billion between 1992 and 1997 for various water projects, 
while the World Bank spent $900 million. 

Monsanto would like to divert this public money from public supply of 
water to establishing the company's water monopoly.  Since in rural 
areas the poor cannot pay, in Monsanto's view capturing a piece of the 
value created for this segment will require the creation of a 
non-traditional mechanism targeted at building relationships with 
local government and NGOs as well as through mechanisms such as 
microcredit. 

Monsanto also plans to penetrate the Indian market for safe water by 
establishing a joint venture with Eureka Forbes/Tata, which controls 
70 per cent of the UV Technologies. To enter the water business, 
Monsanto has acquired an equity stake in Water Health International 
(WHI) with an option to buy the rest of the business. The joint 
venture with Tata/Eureka Forbes is supposed to provide market access 
and fabricate, distribute, service water systems; Monsanto will 
leverage their brand equity in the Indian market. The joint venture 
route has been chosen so that "Monsanto can achieve management control 
over local operations but not have legal consequences due to local 
issues." Another new business that Monsanto is starting in 1999 in 
Asia is aquaculture. It will build on the foundation of Monsanto's 
agricultural biotechnology and capabilities for fish feed and fish 
breeding. By 2008, Monsanto expects to earn revenues of $1.6 billion 
and a net income of $266 million from its aquaculture business. While 
Monsanto's entry into aquaculture is through its sustainable 
development activity, industrial aquaculture has been established to 
be highly non-sustainable. The Supreme Court has banned industrial 
shrimp farming because of its catastrophic consequences.  However, the 
Government, under pressure from the aquaculture industry, is 
attempting to change the laws to undo the court order. At the same 
time, attempts are being made by the World Bank to privatise water 
resources and establish trade in water rights. These trends will suit 
Monsanto well in establishing its water and aquaculture businesses.

The Bank has already offered to help. As the Monsanto strategy paper 
states: 

 "We are particularly enthusiastic about the potential of partnering 
 with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) of the World Bank to 
 joint venture projects in developing markets.  The IFC is eager to 
 work with Monsanto to commercialise sustainability opportunities and 
 would bring both investment capital and on-the-ground capabilities to 
 our efforts." 

Monsanto's water and aquaculture businesses, like its seed business, 
aimed at controlling the vital resources necessary for survival, 
converting them into a market and using public finances to underwrite 
the investments. A more efficient conversion of public goods into 
private profit would be difficult to find.

Water is, however, too basic for life and survival and the right to it 
is the right to life. Privatisation and commodification of water are a 
threat to the right to life. India has had major movements to conserve 
and share water. The pani panchayat and the water conservation 
movement in Maharashtra and the Tarun Bharat Sangh in Alwar have 
regenerated and equitably shared water as a commons property. 

This is the only way everyone will have the right to water and nobody 
will have the right to abuse and overuse water. Water is a commons and 
must be managed as a commons. It cannot be controlled and sold by a 
life sciences corporation that peddles in death. 

                      *  The Activist  *
                    http://get.to/activist

This is not about the world that we inherited from our forefathers,
  It is about the world we have borrowed from our children !!
___________________________________________________________
Reprinted under the fair use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                             

Reply via email to