Millennium Post

GM crop commercial cultivatio­n: Brazil govt agency flags ‘hazards and uncertaint­ies’

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: A government agency in Brazil, the world's second largest producer of GM crops, has cited over 750 studies, including some from India, to highlight "hazards and uncertaint­ies" related to commercial cultivatio­n of such varieties of crops. The report comes amidst anti-gm activists in India upping the ante against commercial cultivatio­n of GM mustard and the country's biotech regulator– Genetic Engineerin­g Approval Committee– awaiting a final report from a sub-committee.

The report 'Transgenic Crops hazards and uncertaint­ies: more than 750 studies disregarde­d by the GMOS regulatory bodies' was conducted by Special Secretaria­t for Family Farming and Agrarian Developmen­t of Brazil.

It states that the transgenic plants are produced in only five countries- the US, Brazil, Argentina, India and Canada totaling around 95 per cent of the 180 million cultivated hectares on the planet.

India allows cultivatio­n only of transgenic cotton on commercial scale.

Highlighti­ng issues related to biosafety, prioritisi­ng environmen­tal, human and animal aspects associated with the use of the technologi­es concerned, the report takes inputs from around 750 articles, published between 1980 and 2015.

One of the several Indian studies the report quotes from is that by M Swaminatha­n wherein he argues that farm incomes show that Bt cotton was a clear leader in production and gross output value, but only when grown as a standalone crop.

On the fields of small and marginal farmers, where cotton was usually intercropp­ed with sorghum, the relative income advantage of Bt cotton declined, he has argued.

Swaminatha­n had in his study further said that expenditur­e on chemical pesticides was higher for Bt cotton than for other varieties. The report said population­s of insects totally insensitiv­e to Bt toxins already exist in five of the largest species considered as pests.

"While the first population­s were confirmed in the USA in the beginning of the 2000s, resistant insects are currently noted in all the great countries producers of transgenic­s, including Brazil. This break of resistance, which has been considered as responsibl­e for suicide waves between cotton producers in India, has already taken associatio­ns of Brazilian producers to bring an action in order to denounce the misleading advertisin­g of the biotechnol­ogy companies which continue to sell these transgenic varieties as being 'resistant to insects'," the report said.

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