Iran Daily

Food shortage is not the global crisis, lack of access to food is the issue

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“Genome editing is not the answer to world poverty, because food shortage isn’t the problem” said a group of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons (NGOS) surveyed by the University of Nottingham.

This is one of three main ¿ndings in a report from the School of Sociology and Social Policy at the university, which looks at NGO’S skepticism of genome editing technology, phys.org wrote.

Genome editing is a rapidly emerging biotechnol­ogy gathering hype as a new tool which can be used to develop solutions to a number of global food security issues, vulnerabil­ities, and problems.

However, resistance to these technologi­es is well documented and the debate around agricultur­al technology has been heated and long-running, with the arguments by Greenpeace and NGOS against the technology, being frequently dismissed as based on ‘emotion’ and ‘dogma’.

As with earlier debates on GM crops, NGOS have increasing­ly become the subject of intense criticism from leading scientists who support genome editing in agricultur­e. The debates have provoked passion on all sides, but rarely have they led to a mutual understand­ing from both parties. There is now a danger that genome editing will be mired in a similarly polarized and intractabl­e debate as the wider ¿eld of agricultur­al technology.

In the report ‘Why are NGOS skeptical of genome editing?’ published in EMBO reports, experts from the University of Nottingham, University of Exeter, and University of Shef¿eld examine why NGOS are so skeptical through a one-day focus group and nine interviews involving 14 participan­ts from UK and Eu-based NGOS.

The ¿ndings suggested that opposition to agricultur­al biotechnol­ogy and genome editing cannot be dismissed as being emotional or dogmatic.

Instead, the results of the study found that the view from NGOS on genome editing is based on three speci¿c skepticism­s:

● How the problem is de¿ned as a lack of food rather than a lack of access to food, and the alleged urgency of this crisis.

● The solutions, particular­ly whether further entrenchin­g intensive agricultur­e through science and technology can address socio-economic inequaliti­es

● The motivation­s for removing genome editing from GM regulation­s — are those involved driven purely for the greater good? Or are they driven by commercial objectives?

Richard Helliwell from the University of Nottingham, and lead author of the report, said: “Skeptical NGOS give alternativ­e problems and solutions with different outcomes, as part of a broader political discussion about policy impacts within society.

“Our research clearly shows that opportunit­ies are needed for open and constructi­ve debate to build a mutual understand­ing of opposing positions if the goal is to truly assess the potential for genome-edited crops to play a role in addressing the problem of global food vulnerabil­ity.”

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