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Most Credible Report on Whether GM is the Answer? |
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| UN’s
Food and Agriculture Organisation, the World Health Organisation and the
British and |
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Sixty
countries backed by the World Bank and most UN bodies yesterday called for
radical changes in world farming to avert increasing regional food
shortages, escalating prices and growing environmental problems. The
report which was issued as the UN’s World Food Programme, said that
According to the World Bank, 33 countries are now in danger of political
destabilisation and internal conflict following food price inflation. The
report - the first significant attempt to involve governments, NGOs and
industries from rich and poor countries - took 400 scientists four years
to complete. The present system of food production and the way food is
traded around the world, the authors concluded, has led to a highly
unequal distribution of benefits and serious adverse ecological effects
and was now contributing to climate change. The
authors say science and technology should be targeted towards raising
yields but also protecting soils, water and forests. “Investment in
agricultural science has decreased yet we urgently need sustainable ways
to produce food. Incentives for science to address the issues that matter
to the poor are weak,” said Watson. The GM
industry, which helped fund the report, together with the UN’s Food and
Agriculture Organisation, the World Health Organisation and the British
and The
scientists said they saw little role for GM, as it is currently practised,
in feeding the poor on a large scale . “Assessment of the technology
lags behind its development, information is anecdotal and contradictory,
and uncertainty about possible benefits and damage is unavoidable,” said
the report. “The
short answer to whether transgenic crops can feed the world is ‘no’.
But they could contribute. We must understand their costs and benefits,”
said Watson yesterday But in a
move that has led to the The
authors of the 2,500-page International Assessment of Agricultural Science
and Technology for Development [IAASTD] say the world produces enough food
for everyone, yet more than 800 million people go hungry. “Food is
cheaper and diets are better than 40 years ago, but malnutrition and food
insecurity threaten millions,” they write. “Rising populations and
incomes will intensify food demand, especially for meat and milk which
will compete for land with crops, as will biofuels. The unequal
distribution of food and conflict over control of the world’s dwindling
natural resources presents a major political and social challenge to
governments, likely to reach crisis status as climate change advances and
world population expands from 6.7 billion to 9.2 billion by 2050.” Robert
Watson, director of IAASTD and chief scientist at the UK Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, said: “Business as usual will hurt
the poor. It will not work. We have to applaud global increases in food
production but not everyone has benefited. We have not succeeded globally.
In some parts of The
authors also warned that the global rush to biofuels was not sustainable.
“The diversion of crops to fuel can raise food prices and reduce our
ability to alleviate hunger. The negative social effects risk being
exacerbated in cases where small-scale farmers are marginalised or
displaced form their land,” they said. Responding
to the report, a group of eight international environment and consumer
groups, including Third World Network, Practical Action, Greenpeace and
Friends of the Earth, said in a statement: “This is a sobering account
of the failure of industrial farming. Small-scale farmers and ecological
methods provide the way forward to avert the current food crisis and meet
the needs of communities.” Lim Li
Chung, of Third World Network in Guilhem
Calvo, an adviser with the ecological and earth sciences division of
Unesco, one of the report’s sponsors, said at a news conference in At a glance
Bio-energy
The report says biofuels compete for land and water with food crops and
are inefficient. They can cause deforestation and damage soils and water. Biotechnology
The use of GM crops, where the technology is not contained, is
contentious, the UN says. Data on some crops indicate highly variable
yield gains in some places and declines in others. Climate
change While modest temperature rises may increase food yields in some
areas, a general warming risks damaging all regions of the globe. There
will be serious potential for conflict over habitable land. Trade
and markets Subsidies
distort the use of resources and benefit industrialised nations at the
expense of developing countries. © 2008 The Guardian Article
printed from www.CommonDreams.org
URL to
article: http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/04/16/8327/ Published on Wednesday, April 16, 2008 by The
Guardian/UK Click here
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