Biotech food for the hungry 
Jim Nicholson IHT Saturday, October 2, 2004

Fruits of science 

VATICAN CITY The number of people who die of starvation dwarfs the number who die from 
terrorism. Last year, 625 people died from terrorism; 10 million from starvation. 
Every five seconds someone dies for lack of food; 25,000 people will die of hunger 
today. So just as we must explore every means to defeat terrorism, we must also 
explore every means to meet the most basic need of every human being - food. 
.
As the largest provider of food aid in the world, the United States is just as 
committed to the struggle to feed the hungry as it is to the struggle against 
terrorism. But we want to do more than provide handouts. We want countries to be able 
to feed themselves. 
.
With this in mind, the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See recently sponsored an 
international conference in Rome to examine the potential of biotechnology to help 
meet this challenge of hunger. Scientists, farmers from developing countries, senior 
government officials and theologians spoke in broad agreement that biotechnology is an 
indispensable tool to meet the world's growing demand for more food. The Pontifical 
Academy of Sciences, the Pope's scientific advisory board, joined with us in trying to 
seek the truth and dispel myths about biotech foods. 
.
Dr. C.S. Prakash, an Indian-born scientist whose research has increased the 
nutritional value of the sweet potato fourfold, told the conference that half of 
sub-Saharan Africans are malnourished today, a figure that is expected to increase to 
70 percent by 2010. He said that world population growth has reduced the amount of 
arable land, making greater agricultural productivity a necessity: "We must produce 
more food with less land, less water and less chemicals." 
.
Biotechnology can do this. 
.
The best assessment of biotechnology's potential came from farmers themselves. Sabina 
Khoza, a South African maize farmer, and Edwin Paraluman, a corn farmer in the 
Philippines, told us that their yields and incomes are up, and their use of harmful 
pesticides is down. 
.
Unfortunately, the ability of farmers such as Khoza and Paraluman to take advantage of 
this new tool has been severely restricted in many countries by widespread resistance 
based upon misinformation about biotechnology safety - misinformation sown by 
ideologically motivated groups and nurtured by EU trade protectionists. 
.
These critics continue to claim that biotech foods are unsafe despite the fact that 
millions of Americans, Canadians, Australians, Argentines and other people have been 
eating genetically modified food for nearly a decade - without one proven case of an 
illness, allergic reaction or even the hiccups. 
.
Activists even convinced African governments facing drought-induced famine in late 
2002 to return tons of World Food Program corn because it was produced in America 
using biotechnology. Better to die than eat the food that Americans eat every day. 
.
For those who question the morality of biotechnology, suggesting that it is unnatural, 
the scientists pointed out that mankind has been genetically altering food throughout 
human history. In fact, almost none of the foods we consider "natural" today exist in 
nature; all have been genetically modified for human use. 
.
In exploring the potential contributions of biotechnology, the United States and the 
Holy See are very aware that world hunger has many causes: poverty, drought, disease, 
armed conflicts, inadequate transportation and government corruption. All play their 
part in this tragedy, and all must be addressed if we are to end hunger and 
malnutrition. 
.
But biotech foods, now the staple of choice for America and millions of others, ought 
to be allowed in Africa to mitigate the plight of people suffering from starvation. 
There is not one shred of scientific evidence to suggest otherwise. 
.
Ensuring all men their daily bread is the best way to promote the dignity of 
humankind. Biotechnology offers a scientifically sound means to feed the world's 
neediest. As Dr. Peter Raven, one of the world's leading genetic scientists, 
explained, "to a mother in a famine-struck region of Africa, the disease she and her 
children suffer from is hunger, and the cure is food." 
.
That is why sharing the fruits of biotechnology with those who hunger is a moral 
imperative. The conscience of all committed to the common good should demand it. 
.
Jim Nicholson is the United States ambassador to the Holy See. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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