Science Society Sustainability
http://www.i-sis.org.uk
ISIS Press Release 21/01/05
GM Cotton: Corruption, Hype, Half-truths and Lies
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Rhea Gala reports
<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/GMCCHHTALFull.php>Sources for this
report are available in the ISIS members site. Full details
<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php>here
Monsanto fined for bribery
Monsanto has just been fined $1.5m by the US Department of Justice
for a bribe of $50 000 paid to a senior Indonesian environmental
official in an unsuccessful bid to bypass the requirement for the
environmental impact statement for its Bt cotton crop.
The bribe was paid by a consultant working for the company's
Indonesian affiliate, but was approved by a senior Monsanto official
based in the US, and disguised as consultants' fees.
The company also admitted to paying over $700 000 in bribes in
Indonesia between 1997 and 2002, which was financed by improper
accounting of its pesticide sales.
Monsanto had withdrawn its Bt cotton by December 2003; after a
scathing report from the Indonesian government condemning the crop
(see "<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GMCFATW.php>GM fiascos around the
world", this series).
Monsanto has been exposed in this one instance. But the company is
aggressively pushing its GM crops in numerous other countries with
the same hype, half-truths and lies.
Randy Hautea, global coordinator of the International Service for the
Aquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA) had to admit that
Indonesia had pulled out of the global race for transgenic crops as
"there was some disasters" that led to the government not extending
their approval for the GM cotton. When asked whether a similar
situation would happen in India with Bt cotton, Hautea refused to
comment.
US based ISAAA is funded by biotech giants Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer
CropScience, Pioneer Hi-Bred etc., and describes itself as a
not-for-profit organization with a mission to "contribute to poverty
alleviation by increasing crop productivity and income generation"
and to deliver "the benefits of new agricultural biotechnologies to
the poor in developing countries."
Whom do you believe?
Conflicting accounts of the success/failure of Bt cotton have been
coming from India for several years now. Monsanto claims that Bt
cotton is great for Indian farmers, giving increased sales etc., but
carefully conducted research shows the opposite to be the case:
massive crop failures and uncontrollable pest infestations were also
reported (see "Broken promises",
<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis22.php>SiS 22). And while
politicians, seeking to appear progressive and patriotic, praised the
Îadvantages' of biotech, the farmers have resorted to, at times,
violent protest and suicide because of losses incurred through using
the GM varieties.
The Indo-Asian News Service reported that agriculture ministry
sources had claimed that the large-scale plantation of GM cotton in
2004 had played a big role in helping India achieve a bumper crop.
However, earlier that year, India's Financial Express reported that
in spite of claims that India was a key GM crop cultivator, the
actual area planted with GM cotton was miniscule compared with the
total cotton growing area: about 1 %.
Monsanto commissioned a marketing organization to carry out a survey
among Bt cotton growing farmers, with a single contact during the
second season of GM adoption (the first had failed very badly leaving
farmers in debt). In the same season, a detailed study carried out by
Dr Abdul Qayoom, former joint Director of Agriculture in Andhra
Pradesh, and Sakkari Kiran, involving contacts with farmers every 15
days, showed that Monsanto's Bt cotton had been out- performed again
by non-GM cotton. Furthermore, the Monsanto- commissioned study had
claimed for Bt cotton four times the actual reduction in pesticide
use, twelve times the actual yield, and 100 times the actual profit!
Commenting on a recent ISAAA report, PV Satheesh, convenor of the
Hyderabad based Deccan Development Society said "Bt cotton failed to
live up to expectations in the third consecutive year in different
parts of south India.
Nevertheless, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and
Industry remarked that GM crops offer the potential for huge
productive gains, and hold a lot of promise for Indian agriculture.
According to the ISAAA, India is categorized as a "mega-biotech
country" with the highest percentage area increase under transgenic
crops in the world; though only GM cotton is commercially grown.
ISAAA claims that Bt cotton can reduce insecticide requirements by
half, and make significantly greater savings for farmers. That is
most unlikely, because farmers using Bt cotton seed are charged a
Îtechnology fee' based on predicted savings on pesticide application;
and also because Bt crops do not necessarily reduce pesticide use.
Moreover, Bt cotton varieties are not always effective against local
cotton pests, which can vary from one area to the next.
Misinformation
In Australia, the biotech industry and farmers are funding a group
called ÎAgrifood Awareness' to the tune of $AUS 100 000, via a
compulsory research and development levy, with the mandate of
"guiding meaningful opinions" in GMOs. Their biotech bulletin, "GM
cotton adoption", which set the scene for the 12th Australian cotton
conference in August 2004, also gave a misleading impression of the
extent of adoption of GM cotton around the world.
Agrifood Awareness, like many official bodies and even governments,
relies heavily on figures supplied by ISAAA, though their figures on
GM adoption are often highly inflated, and ISAAA is very vague about
how these figures are generated (see "The GM bubble". <http://www.i-
sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis22.php>SiS 22).
There are approximately 20 million cotton farmers worldwide. In 2003,
they grew 30 million hectares of cotton that produced 84 million
bales of cotton. Sixty-five tropical, sub-tropical and temperate
countries worldwide were involved, but ten countries account for 80
percent of the total area planted with cotton (see Table 1).
Table 1. Top ten countries for most hectares of cotton planted 2001-2002.
(See website for tables)
The total area growing GM cotton in 2002 was 6.8 million hectares,
significantly more than in 2001; this increased to 7.2.million
hectares in 2003, or 21% of the 34 million hectares of cotton grown
globally according to ISAAA. By 2004 7.8 million hectares of GM
cotton were being grown by the three top growers USA, China and India
(see Table 2). The figure for India's area of Bt Cotton grown in 2004
in table 2, at 100 000 hectares, is given by Professor Runge in a
report prepared for the Council on Biotech Information. But ISAAA
estimates that in 2004 the area under Bt cotton increased by 400%, in
spite of failing over three seasons, to 500 000 hectares.
What the Agrifood Awareness biotech bulletin failed to mention is
that only the top three cotton producing countries out of the top ten
have commercial production of GM cotton, with the USA and China
accounting for practically all of the GM cotton production in the
world. And even by 2004, none of the other ten top cotton growers had
any commercial adoption of GM varieties (Table 2).
Table 2. Adoption of GM cotton production in the top ten
cotton-growing countries in 2004
(See website for tables)
Source columns 4-6: F Runge. The global diffusion of plant biotechnology
GM cotton adoption shows a trend towards the stacked gene varieties.
In 1997, GM stacked gene cotton varieties containing both the Bt and
herbicide tolerant (HT) genes were grown for the first time in the
USA. According to the ISAAA, by 2001, the stacked gene variety
accounted for 55 % of all the global commercial cotton containing the
Bt gene, compared with 45 % with the Bt gene alone.
The Agrifood Awareness biotech bulletin further stated that by 2001,
up to five million farmers grew Bt cotton, with 99 % in developing
countries, implying that GM cotton bring benefits to many small
farmers. At least 97 % of cotton farmers in developing countries farm
on two hectares or less, with farmers in north and east China growing
on less than half a hectare on average. So, the figure of 99 % of
farmers growing GM cotton in developing countries, if accurate,
represents a substantial number of farmers only in China. In the US,
the biggest GM cotton adopter in terms of area under cultivation, the
number of farmers involved is comparatively tiny.
In fact, the US, China and Argentina are the most prolific adopters
of GM cotton, having taken up 73%, 62% and 20 - 60% respectively of
cotton production.
This article can be found on the I-SIS website at
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GMCCHHTAL.php
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