Poster's note : blends adaptation, mitigation and geoengineering

https://www.geneticliteracyproject.org/2016/01/12/genetic-engineering-valued-tool-climate-change/

Could genetic engineering be a valued tool against climate change?Andrew
Porterfield | January 12, 2016 | Genetic Literacy Project

As we look to the future of agriculture, one issue should dominate the
debate: the world’s climate continues to become warmer. Companies and
governments have started working with farmers to take steps to reduce the
severity of climate change, including the use of biotechnology and genetic
modifications.

The effects of global climate change will probably impact farmers more than
other groups, because farming is almost entirely at the whim of
precipitation and temperature. Because of global climate change, the USDA’s
Economic Research Service in November predicted that, from 2020 to 2080,
yields will decrease for corn, soybeans, sorghum, rice, cotton oats and
silage, but will increase for wheat, hay and barley. In addition, the costs
of irrigation for all of these crops will rise, due to increases in
temperature, more frequent drought conditions, and the increasing scarcity
of ground- and surface water. These changes will also change our definition
of “normal,” from heat waves, droughts, pests, and diseases.

But as much as climate change has impacted farmers, the reverse is
also true: agriculture is significantly impacting the changing climate.
Farming activities are estimated to account for 10 percent of global
temperature rises. Rice, for example, is responsible for nearly 20
percent of all human-generated methane, one common greenhouse gas.

Companies and governments are looking for ways to reduce the carbon
footprint of agriculture, and sooner rather than later. Recently,Monsanto
pledged that it would become “carbon-neutral,” i.e. emit no net carbon in
its operations or products, by 2021. The company announced that it would do
this by changing its own internal operations, and by working with its seed
production operations and farmers to encourage cover crops, conservation
tillage, genetic modification of seeds and plants, and breeding.

These changes by Monsanto and other companies would impact all manner of
farming: conventional, those using genetic modifications, and organic:

Cover crops involve growing certain plants to protect soils from erosion,
evaporation and carbon emissions. Cover crops have also long been advocated
for by the organic agriculture industry as an alternative to some
pesticides, and as a way to preserve soil moisture and
nutrients.Conservation tillage is a hybrid of techniques espoused by
conventional farmers, especially those working with herbicide-resistant
crops. Conservation tillage includes “no till,” “strip-till,” “ridge-till”
and “mulch-till.” Each uses special equipment to keep the previous year’s
crops on the field, and planting the subsequent year’s crop on areas that
have not been tilled, or have been cleared into a narrow strip or ridge,
thus preventing carbon release and soil erosion. Some experts have
estimated that using biotech crops that resist herbicides has increased the
use of no-till techniques by 69 percent.

Genetic modification also has a powerful role in addressing global climate
change, and has been combined with conservation tillage and cover crops.
Some of these include effects that can directly reduce the severity and
impact of climate change:

Earlier this year, scientists reported in Nature the development of a rice
crop that, with the addition of a single barley gene SUSIBA2, reduced
methane production of the rice. A three year trial in China demonstrated
significant methane reductions. However, the product will probably not be
available to consumers for many years as the crops will mostly like be
created through traditional breeding, and not direct genetic modification,
because they will probably be easier to approve.In an unusual cross over
move using agriculture for consumer products, the Massachusetts-based
company Modular Geneticsmodified an industrial bacterium to grow on
discarded soybean hulls (instead of sugar) to produce a chemical used in
personal-care products. This recycles carbon instead of releasing it into
the atmosphere, without diverting the production of sugar to feed the
bacteria.The use of biotech crops has reduced fuel use around the world
(and therefore, also reduced carbon dioxide emissions) by 1.2 billion
gallons between 1996 and 2010. This reduction was brought about by fewer
applications of pesticides (meaning, fewer sprayer, truck and tractor
runs), and reduced need to cultivate soil.

Genetic modifications have also shown their ability to adapt to the effects
of climate change (both those happening now, and are predicted to happen):

Officials from the drought-stricken Indian state of Maharashtravisited a
field in Indonesia which has been growing genetically modified,
drought-resistant sugar cane, usually a very water-dependent plant.
Indonesian scientists and officials reported that the healthy-looking sugar
canes had not been irrigated for four months.The rising sea levels as well
as incursion of fresh groundwater by sea water has forced farmers to
face conditions of increased salinity, Indian scientists
developed genetically modified varieties of rice that contain genes from
plants that grow in mangroves (which thrive in salt water). The modified
crops could survive in much higher concentrations of salt water. However,
salt tolerance is a complex trait and not easily resolvable by inserting a
small number of genes. Thanks to a lifting of field trial bans by the
Indian government, research can continue.

Earlier this year, the USDA Economic Research Service issued a reportthat
called for some changes in how genetic resources are used, including a
shift in biotechnology’s focus from tolerance of pests and diseases, to
handling heat and drought (preferably, both of those stresses together).

The USDA study also stressed that landraces (local varieties of a crop) and
wild relatives of domestic crops might have genetic varieties that could be
used for commercial crop production. This could, of course be done by
traditional hybridization and breeding, or by recombinant or gene editing
biotechnology, the latter of which is generally much faster.

Efforts to apply more biotechnology to agricultural problems and climate
change have been met with opposition, however. As reported by the Genetic
Literacy Project (and other outlets), so-called “green” organizations like
Greenpeace have cited poorly-done studies that erroneously purport to
show how biotech crops are ineffectual in drought or high-temperature
environments. This spread of misinformation may pose a serious threat to
universal endorsement of biotech-based agricultural solutions to climate
change.

In a study on the attitudes of business, government and non-government
non-profits showed, participants were more willing to privately favor
biotechnology as a source of solutions to climate change, but few were
willing to express that sentiment publicly. Philipp Aerni at the University
of Zurich, the head of the study, wrote:

Since core stakeholders in both debates (Greenpeace and the World Wildlife
Fund are involved with both climate change and GMO issues) radically oppose
the use of modern biotechnology, and can count on widespread public
support, especially in affluent countries,…other stakeholders may also side
with the popular view, even if that view may not be in line with their more
pragmatic personal view.

Biotechnology may not be ‘clean tech’ as long as powerful environmental
groups say it is not.

Private companies, government agencies, and farmers themselves are calling
(and searching) for new tools to address adaptation to climate change, and
determine whether its extreme forms are inevitable. A combination of
science-based techniques and technologies, while simultaneously not
adhering to one ideological, political or technical artifact, has been
fingered as the most productive direction for society. As
an Economist editorial concluded, “Thinking caps should replace hair
shirts, and pragmatism should replace green theology.” Time for innovation:
it’s getting hotter outside.

Andrew Porterfield is a writer, editor and communications consultant for
academic institutions, companies and non-profits in the life sciences. He
is based in Camarillo, California. Follow @AMPorterfield on Twitter.

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