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Why GM food and crops won't feed the world
It is often claimed GM
crops will help to feed the world’s growing population in the 21st century by
increasing yields and fighting crop diseases.
But GM technology is driven by big corporations for profit, not for the
benefit or the world’s poor.
Hunger
The
root cause of hunger is poverty. Most of the people in the world who suffer from
malnutrition and hunger do so because they cannot afford to buy food, not
because it is unavailable.
Complex
social, political and economic forces affect peoples' access to land, money and
resources. Factors like unequal landownership, the oppression of women, and low
agricultural prices, much more than the level of food production, determine who
gets to eat, and who does not.
It
is not just a simple case of "more people = more food should be
grown". There is more than enough food to feed everyone very well at
present, yet hundreds of millions of people go hungry and nearly two billion are
malnourished. Even in the
One
of the main rationales for the production of GE food is that it will feed the
hungry in developing countries. The home page of Monsanto has the picture below
on its webpage, and Syngenta (sales in 2005 were approximately $8.1 billion and
employing more than 19,000 people in over 90 countries) has a link to
'sustainable agriculture in
Producing
more food is not going to help feed people.
Poor people are hungry not because there isn't enough food, but because they
don't have access to that food, usually because they don't have the money to buy
it or don't have the land to grow it. In his 1981 book Poverty and Famines, the
Nobel prize winner Amartya Sen examined three famines and showed in each case
that there was adequate food available during the famine to feed all the
undernourished. It's usual to see food exports going on during famines.
In
2005 the UN Development Programme announced that for the first time there were
now more over than under-nourished people in the world 1.1 billion as opposed
to 820 million[1].
Obesity is a major health problem in
Did the green revolution, starting in the 1960s, help feed the world?
Availability has gone up since the 1960s, as can be seen in the Table below[3]:
|
Global
and regional per capita food consumption (kcal per capita per day) |
||||
|
Region |
1964
- 1966 |
1974
- 1976 |
1984
- 1986 |
1997
- 1999 |
|
World |
2358 |
2435 |
2655 |
2803 |
|
Developing
countries |
2054 |
2152 |
2450 |
2681 |
|
Industrialized
countries |
2947 |
3065 |
3206 |
3380 |
Global
availability of calories has increased by about 15 per cent since the 1960s, and
the proportion of hungry people in developing countries decreased from about 37%
to 17% of the total population in those countries between the present and now.
But this average is deceptive, and mainly depends on a massive decrease in
hunger in
The
green revolution did bring some benefits to the poor from a second crop and
returns to sharecroppers, agricultural labourers and marginal farmers (the poor)
from extra employment. These gains were offset by widespread environmental
pollution caused by inputs needed for high yielding varieties as opposed to
local varieties (it is now increasingly difficult to find local varieties),
which has meant that benefits have not been sustainable. Further, the green
revolution mainly focused on rice and wheat, rather than crops which the very
poor eat, such as millet. The green revolution was an industrial agricultural
model relying on monocultures similar increases in yields can be achieved
through improved indigenous farming practices that promote biodiversity.
Intensive
Agriculture
GM
technology relies heavily on intensive agriculture and large scale cash crops -
pushing out small farmers in the Developing World who rely on traditional and
locally adapted crops to survive. The majority of GM crops at present are
herbicide tolerant, designed for use in intensive farming systems, with single
crops in large fields requiring heavy use of chemicals. Most farming in
developing countries is small scale, growing many different crops and they often
cannot afford expensive herbicides anyway.
The
Seed
Saving
GM
seeds are the property of the biotechnology company that developed them, which
means if a farmer saves the seed from one harvest to grow the next year then
they are infringing the company's patent. This directly threatens the ancient
farming practice of saving a part of the harvest to plant as seed for next
year’s crop. Over one billion of the world’s poorest people rely on
farm-saved seed for their food. GM seeds could end this practice, reducing the
self-reliance of farmers and forcing them to spend money each year on new seeds.
Farmers unable to afford this technology may end up in debt, or even poorer.
Can
GE crops feed the world?
Even if GE crops were to increase food production, this is unlikely to make much
difference to poor people, who won't be able to buy the food, or will see it
stolen by corrupt bureaucrats. Most GE crops in
Over the long term GE crops are almost certain to have a negative effect on
hunger. Like the green revolution, they are based on a monoculture philosophy,
whereas the only sustainable food systems are built on biodiversity, a
biodiversity which GE crops are likely to destroy.
For
more detailed coverage of GE issues in
James
Botham, Friends of the Earth; http://www.birminghamfoe.org.uk/newslet/news0603/STORY_7.HTM
Tony Beck,
[2]
British Medical Journal,
Vol. 326, March 2003, p. 2.
[3]
http://www.who.int/nutrition/topics/3_foodconsumption/en/index.html
[4]
Friends
of the Earth (2007) Agriculture and
Food. Who benefits from GM crops? An analysis of the global performance of
GM crops 1996-2006.
[5]
5http://www.isb.vt.edu/cfdocs/isblists2.cfm?opt=4