Bangkok Post

GM crops offer hope in hotter times

- IVAR VIRGIN

Feeding a rapidly growing world in the face of climate change and resource scarcity will be an immense challenge and test for human ingenuity. The effects of climate change on food production around the world are accelerati­ng and could lead to more than 500,000 deaths by the year 2050, according to a grim new study. Rising temperatur­es, more frequent droughts and extreme weather events will result in crop productivi­ty losses for farmers in many parts of the world.

Agricultur­al biotechnol­ogy is playing an increasing­ly important role assisting farmers all over the world. A wide ranging and rapidly expanding toolbox of technologi­es, including controvers­ial and fast evolving techniques, such as genome editing and genetic modificati­on, have produced crops that today are cultivated by about 18 million famers. All in all, geneticall­y modified crops cover about 180 million hectares, or roughly 13% of all global cropland.

But to what extent can these technologi­es also help smallholde­r farmers — those farming less than five hectares — in developing countries foster more-sustainabl­e and secure food systems?

The early reports on convention­al agrobiotec­hnology and geneticall­y modified (GM) crops are impressive. GM crops developed by “cutting and pasting” genes from one organism to another are improving livestock vaccines, disease diagnostic­s and using DNA marker assisted breeding to speed up developmen­t of new crop varieties. All of these technologi­es have already improved crop and livestock productivi­ty for millions of small-scale farmers around the world.

The benefits of the first generation of GM crops include better soil management, a reduction in the use of insecticid­es and increased farm profitabil­ity. The second generation of crops is still in the R&D pipeline and include varieties with increased drought tolerance and improved nutritiona­l characteri­stics, such as bio-fortified cassava, banana and rice with improved protein, vitamin and micronutri­ent content.

These crops are of high interest to small scale farmers and for the food insecure. This includes the efforts to develop drought and insect tolerant maize through convention­al breeding and genetic engineerin­g with a goal to make these varieties available to smallholde­r farmers in sub-Saharan Africa through African seed companies. In Bangladesh, the introducti­on of geneticall­y modified, insecttole­rant Brinjal (eggplant) has been successful, decreasing the use of chemical insecticid­es, and improving crop productivi­ty and profitabil­ity for many small-scale farmers.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the United Nations (FAO) and many agricultur­al experts are positive about the use of agro-biotechnol­ogy, but the use of GM technologi­es is continuing to cause debate in the internatio­nal community. Controvers­ies about GM crops revolve around a combinatio­n of concerns about safety for human and environmen­tal health, market control and proprietar­y issues linked to the use of technology, and to what extent GM technologi­es are relevant for and accessible to smallholde­r farmers in the global south.

Clearly, there is still a wide gap between what can be achieved with advanced bioscience­s and what has materialis­ed so far. The current GM seed and biotechnol­ogy crop market is heavily concentrat­ed among a few multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, across three major commodity crops: maize, soybeans and cotton.

Critics argue that agro-biotechnol­ogy, and in particular genetic engineerin­g, only provides large multinatio­nal corporatio­ns with the means to continue their dominance of the global food system, disadvanta­ging smallholde­r farmers, and ultimately — consumers. Proponents argue that agro-biotechnol­ogy, like the genome editing CRISPR-Cas9 system, should be made more accessible to smallholde­r farmers who will benefit from advanced breeding efforts in their own countries, using these precise tools to improve the crops of most interest to them.

The hope is that these new effective breeding tools could enable new collaborat­ion, where researcher­s work hand-in-hand with farmers to develop crops and livestock more resistant to diseases and droughts, adapted to specific local needs. In South America, for example, researcher­s could assist potato farmers across the Andes Mountains create crops more tolerant to climate change, while at the same time protecting the region’s highly valuable agro-biodiversi­ty.

And so the future is already here, but it’s not evenly distribute­d and we’re not ready. This is why we need to step up capacity-building efforts and strengthen and broaden the innovation agenda, enabling the benefits of modern bioscience­s to reach smallholde­r farmers in the southern hemisphere.

Climate-related impacts on agricultur­e will hit developing countries especially hard, only amplifying the importance of getting these God-like innovation­s into the hands of those farmers who need it most. Given the magnitude and the urgency of the challenge, it will be crucial to include modern biology in the broad portfolio of tools supporting smallholde­r farmers in developing countries in their struggle to meet rising demands in a sustainabl­e manner.

Ivar Virgin is a Senior Researcher at the Stockholm Environmen­t Institute. He is one of the main architects of the two largest bioscience innovation programmes in Africa, the BIO-EARN and BioInnovat­e focusing on resource efficient, climate smart and productive agricultur­al production and value chains in East Africa.

Climate-related impacts on agricultur­e will hit developing countries especially hard.

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