SAFEAGE FACT SHEET NO. 3
COTTON
The
South African government has supported the development of small-scale cotton
farmers, using Monsanto's insect resistant cotton in the Makhatini Flats,
KwaZulu Natal. The Makhatini experiment has been portrayed as a 'success story'
by Monsanto, while it has not yet proven to benefit the lives of local
small-scale farmers.
According
to a study by Biowatch,[i]
only four of 36 Makhatini farmers studied had made a profit when using this
product. Large numbers have defaulted on loans, showing how this GM technology
has failed to provide meaningful solutions to what are complex socio-economic
challenges. This is illustrative of the shortcomings of industrial agriculture
to provide relevant solutions to the challenges confronted by the developing
world.
Most
of the cotton grown in the country is marketed locally. GM Cottonseed oil is a
major concern because it finds its way into cooking oil, shortening, salad
dressing, and in snack foods such as crackers, biscuits and chips. The meal and
hulls produced from cottonseeds are fed to livestock – and thence back to us,
the consumers.
[i]
Pschorn-Strauss, E., April 2005. Bt
Cotton in South Africa: The Case of the Makhatini Farmers, Biowatch
South Africa.
[i] See http://www.isaaa.org