Lies, lies and damn lies. Tell a lie a hundred times, and the chances are
that it would appear to be a truth. Monsanto makes that effort, probably for
the umpteenth number of time. And the chances are that you too could be
duped to accept these distortions as truth.



My attention has been drawn to an article "Do GM crops increase yield?" on
Monsanto's web page. I must confess this is first time I am visiting
Monsanto's site. This is what it says:  Recently, there have been a number
of claims from anti-biotechnology activists that genetically-modified (GM)
crops don’t increase yields. Some have claimed that GM crops actually have
lower yields than non-GM crops.



Both claims are simply false.



And then, it goes on to explain what germplasm is, what is breeding,
biotechnology, and finally comes to yield. This is what it says:



The introduction of GM traits through biotechnology has led to increased
yields independent of breeding. Take for example statistics cited by PG
Economics, which annually tallies the benefits of GM crops, taking data from
numerous studies around the world:



Mexico - yield increases with herbicide tolerant soybean of 9 percent.



Romania – yield increases with herbicide tolerant soybeans have averaged 31
percent.



Philippines – average yield increase of 15 percent with herbicide tolerant
corn.



Philippines – average yield increase of 24 percent with insect resistant
corn.



Hawaii – virus resistant papaya has increased yields by an average of 40
percent.



India – insect resistant cotton has led to yield increases on average more
than 50 percent.



This is not amusing. It can't be taken lightly anymore. I am not only
shocked but also disgusted at the way corporations try to fabricate and
swing the facts, dress them up in a manner that the so-called 'educated' of
today will accept them without asking any question.



At the outset, Monsanto's claims are simply flawed. I have seen similar
conclusions, at least about Bt cotton yields in India, in an IFPRI study.
But then, I have always been saying that IFPRI is one organisation that
needs to be shut down. It has done more damage to developing country
agriculture and food security than any other academic institution.



Nevertheless, let us look at Monsanto's claims.



The increases in crop yields that it has shown in Mexico, Romania, the
Philippines, Hawaii and India are actually not yield increases. In
scientific terms, these are called crop losses, which have been very
cleverly repacked as yield increases. What Monsanto has done is to indulge
in a jugglery of scientific terminologies, and taking advantage of your
ignorance, to build up on claims that actually do not exist.



As per Monsanto's article: The most common traits in GM crops are herbicide
tolerance (HT) and insect resistance (IR). HT plants contain genetic
material from common soil bacteria. IR crops contain genetic material from a
bacterium that attacks certain insects.



This is true. Herbicide tolerant plants and insect resistant plants in a way
perform the same function that chemical pesticides do. Both the GM plants
and the chemical pesticides reduce crop losses. Come to think of it. Doesn't
the GM plants work more or less like a bio-pesticide? The insect feeds on
the plant carrying the toxin, and dies. Spraying the chemical pesticide also
does the same.



In the case of herbicide tolerant plants, it is much worse. Biotech
companies have successfully dove-tailed the trait for herbicide tolerance in
the plant to ensure that those who buy the GM seeds have no other option but
to also buy the companies own brand of herbicide. Killing two birds with one
stone, you would say. Exactly.



GM companies have only used the transgenic technology to remove competition
from the herbicide market. Instead of allowing the farmer to choose from
different brands of herbicides available in the market, they have now
ensured that you are left with only Hobson choice. The use of herbicide
therefore does not come down. Several studies have shown conclusively that
the use of herbicide in the US for instance actually has gone up.



Now, the question that needs to be asked is that if the chemical herbicide
-- Roundup Ready --that Monsanto's herbicide tolerant soybeans use,
increases yield than how come the other herbicides available in the market
do not increase yield? Since all herbicides do the same job -- killing
herbs, all herbicides should be therefore increasing crop yields. Am I not
correct? Why do then we only think that Rounup Ready soyabean (which is a GM
crops) increases yields, whereas other do not?



When was the last time you were told that herbicides increase crop yields?
Chemical herbicides are known to be reducing crop losses. This is what I was
taught when I was studying plant breeding. And this is what is still being
taught to agricultural science students everywhere in the world.



Similarly for cotton. We all know that cotton consumes about 50 per cent of
total pesticides sprayed. These chemical pesticides are known to be reducing
crop losses. For the kind information of Monsanto (and I am sure they will
agree to it without any question) pesticides do not increase crop yields,
and I repeat DO NOT increase cotton yields.



Monsanto's Bt cotton, which has a gene from a soil bacteria to produce a
toxin within the plant that kills certain pests, also does the same. It only
kills the insect, which means it does the same job that a chemical pesticide
is supposed to perform. The crop losses that a farmer minimises after
applying chemical pesticide is never (and has never) been measured in terms
of yield increases. It has always been computed as savings from crop losses.



If GM crops increase yields, shouldn't we therefore say that chemical
pesticides (including herbicides) also increase yields? Will the
agricultural scientific community accept that pesticides increases crop
yields?



That brings me to another relevant question: Why don't agricultural
scientists say that chemical pesticides increase crop yields?



While you ponder over this question (and there are no prizes for getting it
right), let me tell you that the last time the world witnessed increases in
crop yields was when the high-yielding crop varieties were evolved. That was
the time when scientists were able to break through the genetic yield
barrier. The double-gene and triple-gene dwarf wheat (and subsequently the
same trait was inducted in rice) brought in quantum jumps in the yield
potential. That was way back in the late 1960s. Since then, there has been
no further genetic break through in crop yields. Let there be no mistake
about it.



Monsanto is therefore making faulty claims. None of its GM crop varieties
increases yields. They only reduce crop losses. And if Monsanto does not
know the difference between crop losses and crop yields, it needs to take
lessons again in plant breeding.



But please don't fool the world. Don't distort scientific facts.



For the record, let me also state that when Bt cotton was being introduced
in India in 2001 (its entry was delayed by another year when I challenged
the scientific claims made by Mahyco-Monsanto), the Indian Council for
Agriculural Research had also objected to the company's claim of increasing
yield. It is however another matter that ICAR's objections were simply
brushed aside by the Deaprtment of Biotechnology, and we all know why.



Interestingly, ISAAA and several consultancy firms (how can you believe them
after their role in the economic collapse the world is faced with) have been
claiming that cotton yields in India have gone up after Bt cotton was
introduced. Not only for Bt cotton, such claims are made about other crops
too. I have seen this happening for the past two decades, whenever the crop
yields are higher the scientists and the companies take credit. But when the
crop yields are lower the blame invariably shifts to weather. And it makes
me wonder why don't the scientists pat the weather at times of bumper
harvest? You guessed it right.



At least I have never seen scientists and companies thanking the weather for
record harvests. A former Indian Agriculture Minister Mr Chaturanand Mishra
always used to say that he is not the Agriculture Minister, the real
Agriculture Minister is Mr Monsoon.



This year, cotton production estimates in India have been scaled down by 14
per cent. Using the same yardstick, does it not mean that productivity of Bt
cotton is falling? No, how dare you say that. The fault is not of Bt cotton,
but you guessed it right -- inclement weather.  #

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