More political implications of GMOs

Carl Remick carlremick at hotmail.com
Thu Nov 11 07:12:49 PST 1999


[An excerpt follows from a column, “The Politics of Agriculture” by John Ellis, in the current NY Press. Ellis’s point of departure was the recent NY Times’ piece (which I posted here) on the hazards of genetic engineering that focused on the risks of a potential “superweed.” That danger, as Ellis makes clear, is just part of the calamitous impact that genetic engineering could have.]

The macro concern is that as global agriculture shifts from a biologically diverse set of crops to a small set of genetically engineered seeds, some unintended consequence might obliterate one-third of the world’s soya or half of the world’s rice. Lest this seem alarmist, consider one fact: Today, four companies–Monsanto, DuPont, Novartis and Seminis–control 70 percent of the world’s seed technology.

Since genomics research is extraordinarily expensive, the likelihood that most of the world’s seed technology will be owned by even fewer corporate entities is almost certain. Huge "life sciences" companies will be the only ones capable of affording the research and development costs. By the year 2010, 90 percent of the world’s seed technology will probably be owned by two, perhaps three such companies.

The implications of that go way beyond the current European backlash against what the English and the French call "genetically modified" or "gm" foods. More than half of the world’s population is employed, one way or another, by the agricultural industry. A large percentage of community taxes in Europe and Japan go to pay agricultural subsidies. All of these people are looking down the gun barrel of genomics-driven agriculture.

Latin America might export millions of bananas every year, but in 10 years’ time those bananas might be worthless if they’re not genetically enhanced. Hundreds of thousands of people around the world make their living growing coffee, but if that coffee is not genetically engineered to contain the side effects of caffeine, it won’t be competitive in the marketplace. Millions of people around the world make their living growing rice, but if that rice is not pest-resistant and twice as nutritious, it’ll be heavily discounted in global commodity markets.

For hundreds of years, the value-added in agriculture was in the farmer and farm machinery. The genomics revolution places all of agriculture’s value-added in the information and instruction-sets inside what are called HiBred seeds. HiBred seeds are nonregenerative. Farmers have to buy new packets every year. If all the money is in the packet, what does that mean for half of the world’s workers?

It means they’re marginalized. As it is, most of them are supported by community taxation, in the form of agricultural subsidies. Half of all community taxes in France, for instance, go to pay for agricultural subsidies. If the productivity of genomics-based agriculture increases by three percent every year, then agricultural subsidies for traditional agriculture must increase in tandem. In 10 years, that means that 80 percent of community taxation must go to agricultural subsidies.

That’s unsustainable in the short-term and medium-term. It is impossible in the long-term. All agriculture must be genetically engineered in the long-term, or it simply will be unable to compete. And if all the value of agriculture is in seed packets, then the companies that control those seed packets control the livelihoods of half of the world’s working population as well as the livelihoods of all those who support them through subsidies.

That’s incredible power and will almost certainly generate a strong social and political backlash.

What’s truly amazing is that agriculture is just a piece of the genomics revolution. By the end of the next year, either the Human Genome Project or the Celera Genomics Corp. will finish the sequencing of the nearly 3.5 billion nucleotide base pairs contained in every human genome. Once that work is complete, the business of health care, pharmaceuticals and national defense (to name just three) will be transformed. All of the value in those businesses will shift to genomic knowledge. Virtually everything else will be marginalized, in the same way that a Mexican peasant farmer is marginalized by genetically engineered corn.

The social, political, moral and ethical consequences of that are staggering.

[end of excerpt]

Carl

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