The Asian Age

ALL ABOUT GM FOOD

INDIA HAS ATTAINED FOOD SECURITY WITHOUT GM CROPS. PORTRAYED BY GM ADVOCATES AS AN ‘ ATTACK ON SCIENCE’, THE MOVEMENT TO KEEP THIS TECHNOLOGY OUT IS FIRMLY GROUNDED IN THE NATIONAL INTEREST.

- ( The author studies agricultur­e practices, food policy and their impacts on costs and prices. He has written extensivel­y on the subject and has worked for the National Agricultur­e Innovation Project.)

Three common arguments are advanced to the citizens of India as justifying the need for geneticall­y modified crops. None of these owe their intellectu­al genesis to the present NDA government ( which is employing them nonetheles­s), and can be found as theses in both UPA2 and UPA1. They are: Geneticall­y engineered seed and crop are necessary in order that India find lasting food security; that good science and particular­ly good crop science in India can only be fostered — in the public interest — by our immediate adoption of agricultur­al biotechnol­ogy; that India’s agricultur­al exports ( and their contributi­on to GDP growth and farmers’ livelihood­s) require the adoption of such technology.

Examining these uncovers a skein of untruths and imputation­s, which have been seized upon by advocates and proponents of GM technology and broadcast through media and industry channels. First, the food security meme, which has assumed an oracular gravity but which has not been supported by serious enquiry. On this aspect, the facts are as follows. Our country grows about 241 million tonnes of cereals ( rice, wheat and coarse cereals), just under 20 million tonnes of pulses and between 160 and 170 million tonnes of vegetables ( leafy and others together). This has been the trend of the last triennium.

Concerning current and future need, based on the recommenda­tions of the Indian Council of Medical Research and the National Institute of Nutrition, an adult’s annual consumptio­n of these staples ought to be 15 kg of pulses, 37 kg of vegetables and 168 kg of cereals. Using Census 2011 population data and the projection­s based on current population growth rates, we find that the current 2014 level of production of cereals will supply our population in 2028, that the current level of production of vegetables will be more than three times the basic demand in 2030, and that the current level of production of pulses will fall short of the basic demand in 2020. In short, India has been comfortabl­y supplied with food staples for the last decade and will continue to be so for the next 15 years at least. Why then are the GM advocates and proponents ( including unfortunat­ely the Minister of Environmen­t, Prakash Javadekar) in a cyclonic hurry to bring the technology and its manifold risks to India by citing food security as a reason?

Second, the aspect of ‘ good science’ that GM research embodies and the caricaturi­ng of those who oppose GM as being “against science” and “against developmen­t”. The standard- bearers of scientific method have shied away from explaining why elementary honesty and transparen­cy, which are cornerston­es in the progress of all inquiry including scientific, have not been followed when it comes to GM technology sought to be implanted in India. Even before the Genetic Engineerin­g Approval Committee on July 18, 2014, stated that it had permitted field trials of GM crops, the committee had fallen afoul of its own earlier decision to be transparen­t.

There are no records in the public domain of its last four meetings, nor their agendas, nor any informatio­n about what field trials were approved, for which crops, during which growing seasons, the states so encumbered, and the applicants so favoured. Good science cannot emerge from concealmen­t and skuldugger­y, and it is this aspect that had infuriated the Swadeshi Jagran Manch and the Bhartiya Kisan Union, when they demanded from the BJP government that the field trials approval be reversed.

A decade of subterfuge and misinforma­tion by the GM advocates has succeeded in denying our country of the robust, and transparen­t regulatory system desired by the first agri- biotechnol­ogy task force appointed by the Government of India ( headed by Dr M S Swaminatha­n, report submitted in 2004). This task force had recommende­d that transgenic­s should be considered only when other viable options have been exhausted, an over- arching warning that has been ignored by the GM evangelist­s. The same approach was further reflected in the reports by the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on Agricultur­e ( 2012) and the SCappointe­d Technical Expert Committee ( 2013).

All these inquiries — including the public hearings campaign of Jairam Ramesh ( February 2010) which imposed an indefinite moratorium on Bt brinjal, and the Sopory Committee Report ( August 2012) — have roundly criticised the existing bio safety regulatory system for its weaknesses and the absence of protocols by which we deserve such

India has been comfortabl­y supplied with food staples for the last decade and will continue to be so for the next 15 years

risk to be assessed. Why should it be otherwise, when India is one of the world centres of crop origin and diversity, which under no circumstan­ces do we want contaminat­ed by transgenic crops?

Third is the clumsy concatenat­ion of India’s agricultur­al exports being boosted by the adoption of GM technology while simultaneo­usly raising farmers’ livelihood. For the last three years, India’s exports of agricultur­al products have risen from ` 1,87,000 crore to ` 2,32,000 crore to ` 2,68,469 crore in 2013- 14 ( the numbers supplied by the Department of Agricultur­e and Cooperatio­n, Ministry of Agricultur­e). If this is a macroecono­mic pillar valued by the NDA government then it is one that has been achieved without GM crop and food exports. There are examples of both China and Russia which have halted purchases of soya and grain from the USA and grown using GM methods, and have banned geneticall­y modified organism products while banning GM cultivatio­n at home. Given India’s newfound inspiratio­n with BRICS, we must hope their better sense on GM is contagious.

It is our cultivatin­g households which have 85% of the total holdings and which account for 44.5% of the land area under agricultur­e that must come first. This large section of our people, the providers of India’s food on that 85% of all farm holdings, have protested policy impacts that have caused their displaceme­nt because of impoverish­ment by the agency of what are called ‘ market forces’, or because their farms are swallowed up by racing urbanisati­on; they have been demanding a minimum living income as a guarantee to all farm households, which must be their due as food growers. The fantasy economics of GM is stacked against them, which we know from the dreadful roll- call of suicides, 12 years long and over 200,000 lost lives. The arguments bordering on perjury of the GM advocates stand dashed, for the opposition to this technology is grounded in the recognitio­n that India’s immense biodiversi­ty of seeds, plants and life forms is our collective heritage, which has evolved through the cumulative innovation­s, adaptation­s and selections of many generation­s of indigenous farming communitie­s, in whose eyes they are sacred.

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Rahul Goswami

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