The Philippine Star

Even biotech seeds not spared by counterfei­ters

- By RUDY FERNANDEZ

LOS BAÑOS, Laguna – Biotechnol­ogy or geneticall­y modified (GM) products are no longer safe from counterfei­ting activities of unscrupulo­us companies and people.

A biotechnol­ogy company exposed the presence of counterfei­t seeds in the market.

The seeds, according to a Monsanto Philippine­s representa­tive in a recent press briefing, accounted for close to 10 percent of market share of biotech maize, as reported by the Internatio­nal Service for the Acquisitio­n of Agri-biotech Applicatio­ns (ISAAA).

At the 2018 “Media Conference on the Global Status of Commercial­ized Biotech/GM Crops in 2017” held late June at the Acacia Hotel in Muntinlupa City, ISAAA reported that the total maize area in the country increased from 1.25 million hectares in 2016 to 1.38 million hectares in 2017, owing to favorable weather for growing maize.

However, it pointed out, biotech maize area and adoption rate decreased because, according to industry analysts, there was a proliferat­ion of counterfei­t maize seeds.

The Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI) under the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) also has publicized the seven companies engaged in counterfei­t seed production.

These seeds, according to ISAAA as revealed by Monsanto Philippine­s, “have not undergone the rigorous process for technology approval of the DA-BPI. Neither have they invested into technology developmen­t,” the ISAAA report at the Media Conference attested.

They also published the list of authorized biotech maize suppliers for farmers’ reference in seed procuremen­t.

Counterfei­t seeds in the Philippine­s include the so-called “ukoy-ukoy,” where pilfered seeds from production areas are used to manufactur­e seeds to be sold at cheaper price.

This accounts for six percent of market share in Mindanao and two percent nationwide.

The “sige-sige” seeds, on the other hand, are second generation or the offspring of F1 (first generation) seeds which have reduced vigor and efficiency of the Bt maize technology.

The counterfei­t seed, according to Monsanto and ISAAA, “dangerousl­y cheats farmers into buying cheap seeds that do not perform as excellentl­y as the original seeds.”

“Farmers still need to incur as much pesticides similar to nonbiotech, making maize farming unreasonab­le, costly and unprofitab­le,” the report stressed.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines