Business Standard

GOVT TO SOON OKAY 3 LOCAL VARIETIES OF Bt COTTON FOR COMMERCIAL USE

Expected to be priced lower than current ones; seeds would be reusable

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE New Delhi, 10 May

The government is expected to soon allow commercial release of three geneticall­y modified and indigenous­ly developed varieties of cotton seed, for the first time. These were grown by using the now offpatent Bollgard-1 technology. Officials said the seeds (called PAU-1, RS 2013 and F-1861) had been recommende­d for commercial release by the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research. SANJEEB MUKHERJEE writes

The Union government is expected to soon allow commercial release of three geneticall­y modified (Bt) and indigenous­ly developed varieties of cotton seed, for the first time. These were grown by using the off-patent Bollgard-1 technology (BG-1).

Officials said the seeds (called PAU-1, RS 2013 and F-1861) had been recommende­d for commercial release by the the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research (ICAR). The seeds can be reused and this allows significan­tly lower prices than existing varieties, mostly licensed by seed giant Monsanto.

Monsanto first started sublicensi­ng the BG-1 technology, which went off-patent in 2006. It now sub-licenses BG-2. Seeds produced by using this technology occupy 95 per cent of the Indian cotton market. A third technology, BG-3, is in the pipeline but commercial use has not yet been approved.

“We welcome the move to commercial­ly release indigenous­ly produced Bt cotton but it remains to be seen whether this is parallel to the existing BG-2. If priced significan­tly lower than existing seeds, it can have some attraction among farmers, mainly in those areas where pink bollworm is not a big problem,” Kalyan Goswami, executive director of National Seed Associatio­n of India (NSAI), told this newspaper.

Pink bollworm is a major problem in the main cotton growing regions of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtr­a and Gujarat.

NITI Aayog in its recently issued three-year (2017-18 to 2019-20) draft action agenda had supported the use of Bt seeds developed by domestic institutio­ns and companies. Among these three, PAU 1 and F-1861 were developed by Punjab Agricultur­al University, Ludhiana. RS-2013 was developed by Rajasthan Agricultur­al University, Bikaner.

Officials say the average yield of the genotypes is around 500 kg a hectare, more than convention­al cotton seed and close to the average yield from existing Bt varieties. Cotton Corporatio­n of India said the country's average yield in the 2016-17 crop year that ends this September was 568 kg a ha. Locally made Bt varieties, say officials, are moderately resistant to cotton leaf curl disease and the quality of the crop is at par with all convention­al varieties.

The move to commercial­ise the Indian version of Bt cotton comes soon after Monsanto deciding to go slow on bringing new seed technologi­es into the country, after its dispute with some licensees over the trait value or licence fees. The dispute led to the Centre appointing a panel to recommend on cotton seed prices. The latter lowered the retail sale price of Bt cotton seed to ~800 for a 450g packet, down from the earlier ~830-1,030, and slashed the licence fee charged by research firms by 74 per cent. The same price was maintained for 2017-18. The move helped farmers but raised a big question over India’s Intellectu­al Property Rights regime.

Monsanto Mahyco Biotech (India), a joint venture of Mahyco Seeds and Monsanto, licenses its patented BollgardII cotton seed technology to domestic seed companies, for a royalty fee. Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), a Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh-supportive entity, has opposed any move to commercial­ise even locally produced BT cotton.

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