Posted
01st September 2001
Bumperless Crop
By Laurent Belsie, Staff writer
of The Christian Science Monitor
EThe world has never tasted US Patent 6,072,105
- a genetically engineered eggplant - and probably never will.
Scratch biotech potatoes from the menu. And hold the genetically
modified sweet corn. Farming's biotechnology revolution is changing
course.
After
a decade of promises to transform agriculture and tens of millions
of dollars in research and development, biotech firms and seed
companies are scaling back their horizons. Instead of spreading
their know-how to new farm products, they're narrowing their
focus to a few major crops, such as corn and soybeans. The reason:
Deepening consumer skepticism and tighter regulation worldwide
are boosting costs and increasing the business risk of bringing
bioengineered food to market. Unless something changes, biotech
proponents say only mega-crops pushed forward by mega-corporations
will move from the lab to farmers' fields. Skeptics, meanwhile,
are breathing sighs of relief. This much both sides can agree
on: The once-vaunted biotech revolution is bypassing an increasing
number of crops in a bold, perhaps risky, bid to survive. "You
don't see a lot of biotech okra or pumpkins out there," says
Debi Warnick of Syngenta Seeds Inc. in Nampa, Idaho. "We're
going to have more and more orphaned crops," like the eggplant.
Critics
say such delays will give science time to assess the environmental
and health impacts of altering plants' genes. "It is a positive
sign that there is less pressure to adopt these crops," argues
Jane Rissler, senior staff scientist with the Union of Concerned
Scientists in Washington. Consider the bioengineered eggplant.
Developed in the 1990s by scientists at Rutgers University to
resist a destructive beetle, the invention has gotten a cold
shoulder from industry because it represents too minor a crop.
For every acre US farmers devote to commercial eggplant, they
raise more than 74,000 acres of wheat and 95,000 acres of corn.
Not surprisingly, the biotech industry prefers bigger crops
that offer more potential profit.
Six
years ago, the nation's 1.4 million-acre potato crop looked
viable for bioengineering. So biotech giant Monsanto introduced
genetically engineered potato seed designed to resist a damaging
virus. This spring, with commercial processors leery of genetically-
modified organisms (GMOs), the company suspended sales of the
product (although work continues in Mexico).
A
sweet corn engineered by Syngenta could suffer a similar fate.
Never mind that it reduces conventional pesticide spraying,
which can be both costly and environmentally harmful. Processors
don't want any trace of the corn's special gene, because it
could kill their lucrative export markets to Europe, which demands
GMO-free sweet corn, says Syngenta's Ms. Warnick.
More
stringent regulation is forcing mid-sized companies to delay
the introduction of new bioengineered crops. "It has definitely
slowed down the introduction of new products," says Gary Koppenjan,
spokesman for Seminis Inc., the world's largest fruit and vegetable
seed company. The Oxnard, Calif., concern does sell one bioengineered
squash. But the crop represents less than 1 percent of sales.
Although the company continues biotech research, its next bioengineered
vegetable won't emerge for another four to five years. "There
are products that won't have biotech [added in] because of the
regulatory situation," adds John Nelson, marketing manger for
the US arm of Sakata Seed Corp., based in Yokohama, Japan. Sakata
has adopted a company policy not to offer GMOs in any of its
product lines.
The
dramatic slowdown isn't due to domestic regulators, such as
the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), or the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), says
Val Giddings of the Biotechnology Industry Organization, a trade
group based in Washington. It's regulation in the European Union
(EU) and elsewhere. What's especially daunting to companies
is the prospect of having to meet widely varying standards from
country to country. "If [firms are] daunted by the cost of the
technology, just wait until they face the rising cost of registrations,"
says Ronald Meeusen, vice president of research and development
at Dow AgroSciences LLC, based in Indianapolis. "USDA, EPA,
FDA, up to 15 member-state regulatory agencies in the EU ...
as well as the Japanese and others: Every one of them wants
a dossier of studies prepared their way and presented by local
experts in their native language. Many want studies repeated
on their own soil."
Understandably,
each nation wants to safeguard its consumers, industry insiders
concede. But the extra requirements and repeated testing can
add 25 percent to an already hefty bill of $30 million or more
to commercialize a GMO crop. Cost isn't the only issue. "It's
logistics," says Warnick of Syngenta. The company raises its
melon seed in Asia. The melons are then grown in Central America
and exported to the US for consumption. If the firm genetically
engineered its melon seed, it would have to get regulatory approval
in at least three countries. But such delays will help scientists
gain a much better understanding of genetic changes in plants,
critics of the industry say. "It's hard to read the scientific
record of what's going on without being impressed by how much
we don't know," says Charles Benbrook, a consultant to consumer
and environmental groups and former executive director of the
National Academy of Sciences' board of agriculture.
Even
major biotech corporations have had to adapt. Once pushing to
sell a wide variety of genetically modified crops from potatoes
to sugarbeets, Monsanto Co. in St. Louis has narrowed its focus.
"We're focusing on four core crops - corn, oilseeds, cotton,
wheat," says Mark Buckingham, a Monsanto spokesman. Not coincidentally,
those are major crops in North America, with vast acreages and
profit potential. But this go-slow, narrow-focus strategy poses
risks. Market skepticism and the growing thicket of international
rules mean only the largest corporations will be able to afford
to commercialize a bioengineered crop. "The future of agricultural
biotech is somewhat uncertain," says Neil Harl, an agricultural
economist at Iowa State University in Ames. When the fate of
an industry rests in the hands of a few big players instead
of many small ones, "a mistake made in decision-making is far
more devastating.".

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