Greetings Concerned "Cotton" People,

There is a simple answer to eliminating pests of all kinds from cotton and
any other plant. It is called Vermiculture. Granted it is more trouble than
just spraying on a chemical but it doesn't hurt any living thing and it
helps the heck out of plants - they grow up to twice their normal rate and
size. As to pests, they don't like the chemistry of the castings and
therefore they stay away. None are actually killed but that is not the goal
- as long as the pests leave your crops alone you are just fine. 

 

I realize many will sniff in a critical manner, but no one yet has designed
a better system than this one which nature devised millions of years ago. By
the way, in the end it is overall a cheaper than pesticide system because of
yield increases, no environmental impact therefore no safeguards necessary,
no soil erosion, and many more benefits. For the desperate and the believers
among you, see the 2 attachments.

Good luck,

Ed Starr

 

(for Mondays & Thursdays-Main Ofc.)  |  Ed Starr  |  Star Marketing   |
949-496-0050  |  FAX  949-388-7828  |  [EMAIL PROTECTED]|  Dana
Point, CA, USA

 

(for Tue., Wed. & Fri-Home Ofc.)  |  Ed  Starr  |  Star Marketing  |
619-749-9647  |  FAX 619-749-9648  |  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Keith Addison
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2005 9:01 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Biofuel] GM Cotton Fiascos Around the World

 

The Institute of Science in Society

 

Science Society Sustainability

http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

ISIS Press Release 26/01/05

 

GM Cotton Fiascos Around the World

 

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Rhea Gala

 

A <http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/GMCFATWFull.php>fully referenced 

version of this article is posted on ISIS members' website. 

<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php>Details here

 

GM cotton not environmentally friendly or safe

 

Cotton is responsible for more than 10% of world pesticide use 

including some of the most hazardous, and 25% of all insecticide use. 

As weeds and insects become resistant, more and more pesticides are 

needed in a vicious circle that's a recipe for socio-economic, health 

and environmental disaster. About half of the GM cotton grown in the 

United States is herbicide resistant, and a comprehensive analysis by 

Dr. Charles Benbrook, a former Executive Director of the Board on 

Agriculture of the US National Academy of Science, confirmed that it 

required more herbicide than conventional varieties.

 

Most GM cotton crops worldwide are engineered with Bt for resistance 

to insect pests and promoted by firms like Monsanto as 

environmentally friendly, because they need less pesticide.

 

Monsanto's GM cotton 'Bollgard' carries the cry1Ac gene from soil 

bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis, (Bt) to produce a toxin that kills 

some cotton pests including the boll weevil. However, Bollgard does 

not resist sucking pests, such as aphids, that might also damage the 

crop and will therefore require subsidiary spraying.

 

GM cotton not friendly to farmers

 

GM cottonseed prices include a 'technology fee' that can go up every 

year, and is calculated on supposed savings from reduced pesticide 

use with the Bt variety in a particular location.

 

All farmers growing Monsanto's Bt cotton sign a contract, called a 

Technology Use Agreement that is strictly applied. It stipulates that,

 

Farmers cannot save seed for replanting

Farmers are prohibited from supplying seed to anyone else Farmers 

must pay 120 times the technology fee, plus the legal fees of 

Monsanto, if they violate the contract.

 

The Indonesian experience: A cautionary tale

 

Indonesia was the first country in Southeast Asia to permit 

commercial GM farming against the warnings of scientists and 

activists on the environmental and socio-economic impacts. 

Fortunately, permission was granted only on a year-by-year basis, and 

the government reviewed the impact of the failed Bt crop.

 

The review was scathing. This "Gene Revolution", it said, seemed to 

be "a modern tool for cementing farmers' dependence on seeds and 

transnational agrochemical corporations appearing in developing 

countries in different guises." The evidence from Indonesia is that 

"GM crops are nothing more than a profit-motivated deployment of 

scientific power dedicated to sucking the blood of farmers."

 

Monsanto promised Bt cotton would return 3-4 tonnes of cotton per 

hectare while requiring less pesticide and fertilizer than Kanesia, 

the local cotton variety. The seed was given to farmers with 

pesticide, herbicide, (including Roundup) and fertilizer as part of a 

credit scheme costing sixteen times more than non- Bt cotton. In 

fact, the average yield was 1.1 tonnes per hectare and 74% of the 

area planted to Bt-cotton produced less than one tonne per hectare. 

About 522 hectares experienced total crop failure. Despite that, the 

government extended approval for Bt cotton for another year; and the 

results were no better.

 

In 2001 farmers signed contracts, but in 2002 the seed price rose and 

the cotton price slumped. Farmers had no choice but to shoulder the 

debt and sell at the company's rate; as a result, 76% of farmers who 

joined the credit scheme couldn't repay their debt and many burned 

their cotton in protest against the government and the company (see 

"Broken promises", SiS 22 <http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews.php>).

 

In 2003, Monsanto halted operations saying that the Indonesian 

Government's decision to authorize Bt cotton production on a 

year-by-year basis had been a big obstacle to business investment. PT 

Monagro Kimia, a Monsanto subsidiary, was under investigation by the 

US Department of Justice and the Indonesian Corruption Eradication 

Commission on suspicion that a payment of US$ 50 000 was made to 

Indonesian officials in 2002.

 

In January 2005, Monsanto was found guilty of authorising the bribe 

and fined $1.5m (see "<http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GMCCHHTAL.php>GM 

cotton: corruption, hype, half-truths and lies", this series).

 

Bt cotton in India: Lessons not learned

 

Bt cotton entered commercial production in India in 2002 without 

comprehensive assessment for detrimental effects, and despite fierce 

protests by farmers and public interest organizations. Only six of 

India's 29 states in the south and the west of the country have had 

permission to plant Monsanto's Bt cotton. Four strains of Bt seed 

were available with at least one Indian variant of the licensed 

Monsanto varieties.

 

A 2002 study of Bt cotton in the Warangal district of Andhra Pradesh 

found a 35% reduction in the total yield of Bt cotton with a net loss 

of Rs 1295, compared to a net profit of Rs 5368 for non-Bt cotton. Bt 

cotton yield was 50% lower than that promised by Monsanto. Bollworm 

were predominant on both Bt and non-Bt crops showing that Bt cotton 

was ineffective against its target pest.

 

In 2003, there was 30% more rainfall than in 2002, and a new Bt 

hybrid compared favourably with the previous year; however it was 

still 9% less profitable than the non-Bt hybrids.

 

In 2004, farmers in the state of Andhra Pradesh grew Bt cotton on 10% 

of the cotton acreage. Half of the farmers growing Bt cotton bought 

licensed seed from Monsanto at 1 500 rupees per 400 gm packet, while 

the other half bought unauthorised hybrid Bt seed at between Rs 800 

to 1 200 per packet. Non-Bt hybrid seed cost farmers about Rs 400.

 

Farmers found that, with fluctuating weather as in 2002, much of the 

crop showed signs of wilt, and although some Bt cotton recovered from 

severe moisture stress, the yield was very poor compared to non-Bt 

types; also the yield from the unlicensed Bt cotton was better than 

Monsanto's seed because drought tolerant females had been chosen for 

crossing to produce the hybrid. Monsanto is now demanding royalties 

of 70% from these seed producers.

 

Many Bt plants were small with few bolls that were infested with 

bollworm and other pests, including cercospora leaf spot, so the 

cotton had been neither high- yielding nor resistant to bollworm as 

promised by Monsanto. On 12 October, hundreds of farmers in Warangal 

district protested on the streets where the seed and pesticide dealer 

shops were located and demanded compensation for their losses, 

staging a sit-in on the highway. A second protest took place two days 

later when senior officials promised to attend; a Monsanto official 

was subsequently kidnapped. Meanwhile there has been a bumper harvest 

in non-GM cotton.

 

Bt cotton in China

 

Monsanto received a permit in 1997 for commercial production of Bt 

cotton in China and has since shared the Bt cotton market with 

domestically developed varieties that have expanded quickly over the 

country's cotton-growing area.

 

China has been held up as the success story in GM cotton, and is the 

key to statistics claiming benefit for small farmers from GM. 

However, earlier warnings of major problems have now been confirmed 

by a Chinese researcher who reports that the technology will not only 

be useless within six to seven years, but "could cause a disaster". 

Liu Xiaofeng, a researcher from Henan, China's second largest cotton 

producing province, told Reuters that the cotton bollworm is indeed 

developing resistance and will not be susceptible to Bt cotton after 

20-30 generations, or in six to seven years. Moreover, Bt cotton does 

not effectively control secondary pests such as Lygus bug.

 

The early warnings appeared in a study published in June 2002 based 

on the work of scientists at a research institute funded by China's 

Environmental Protection Agency. It found that although Bt cotton was 

effective in bollworm control, it had adverse impacts on the 

parasitic natural enemies of bollworm, and was not effective in 

controlling many secondary pests that damaged the crop. The study 

also found the diversity indices of the insect community in Bt cotton 

fields to be lower than in conventional cotton fields, and that the 

cotton bollworm could develop resistance to Bt cotton.

 

Liu's work has received further collaboration by another study 

published in October 2004, which found that Bt cotton did not reduce 

the total numbers of insecticide sprays because additional sprays 

were required against sucking pests.

 

Field trials in Africa

 

South Africa, already the sixth biggest producer of GM crops in the 

world, grows Bt cotton on large and small commercial scales, 

extolling the benefits to small farmers in spite of the serious debts 

incurred.

 

Although there is a glut of cotton in the world market and depressed 

prices caused by US subsidies to their own growers worth $3.7 b per 

annum, the US government and the world's biggest agrochemical 

companies are putting pressure on West African countries to introduce 

Bt cotton, the 'trojan horse' for other GM crops waiting in the 

wings. In West Africa there are wild relatives of cotton that may be 

contaminated, but in the US, GM cotton is prohibited in Florida where 

wild relatives grow.

 

In November 2003, USAID, with the official support of the 

International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, declared that it 

wants to 'GM-ize' Africa.

 

Mali's National Agricultural Research Institute has been negotiating 

with Monsanto and Syngenta for field trials of Bt cotton. There is a 

plan to convert the country's crop to GM varieties over the next five 

years; local farmers and the public are unaware of this intention. 

West African farmers, already unable to sell enough natural cotton 

because of subsidies, are locked into a cycle of poverty with credit 

against next years harvest.

 

Burkino Faso has been field-testing Bt cotton since July 2003 in 

collaboration with Monsanto. But Francois Traore, president of the 

National Union of Cotton Producers, says, "If we already have the 

means to reduce pesticide use, why look for things that are going to 

complicate life?" Benin has had a moratorium on GM products since 

March 2002, but is under constant pressure to introduce Bt cotton. 

Senegal ran an unofficial field trial of Monsanto's Bt cotton, but 

efforts were abandoned after the cotton failed to perform. Egypt has 

a pro GM policy with field trials underway for Bt cotton and many 

other crops. Kenya has many research institutes pushing GM crops, and 

research on GM cotton is under way. Uganda has just published its 

first biosafety policy bill, which has yet to be made law by 

parliament, however it is expected to take up Bt cotton soon. 

Zimbabwe: The government destroyed some unsupervised field trials of 

Bt cotton conducted by Monsanto some years ago.

 

The Americas

 

In the US, home of Monsanto's Bollgard first planted in 1996, there 

have been problems with erratic and disappointing yield, especially 

in Southeast Arkansas where costs were significantly higher on Bt 

acreage. In 2002, despite the use of supplementary pesticides, 7.5% 

of the Bt crop was destroyed by bollworm and 1.4% destroyed by 

Spodoptera and Pseudoplusia includens caterpillars. The total 

insecticide use has remained relatively stable due to the increasing 

importance of secondary pests; it is lower in dry states such as 

Texas, but increasing in the Mississippi delta.

 

Research on Bollgard cotton adopted in North Carolina, conducted 

between 1996-2003 by Jack Bacheler, North Carolina State University 

Extension entomologist found changes in insect communities, and that 

while damage from bollworms decreased, stink bug problems have 

increased.

 

In 2004, Bt cotton was grown in nine states and comprised more than 

75% of all cotton grown. Most varieties are Roundup Ready (RR) or RR 

and Bt combined [1]. The proposed 'technology fee for Bollgard II was 

US $99 ha in 2004, this is to be added to the seed price.

 

Bt cotton is also grown in Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and Columbia. In 

Columbia the vice-president of the biosafety council works for 

Monsanto and was thus able to both apply for and grant permission for 

release of a Bt crop in an area that is a centre of origin for some 

wild cotton species. Moreover, the pest responsible for 70% of 

pesticide use on cotton is the picudo, which is not targeted by 

Monsanto's cotton. The small farmer will once again lose out due to 

this folly.

 

Overproduction of cotton devastating the environment and destroying 

poor farmers

 

World overproduction of cotton, a crop that degrades the environment 

by escalating requirement for pesticide, demand on scarce water 

resources and exhaustion of soil, is a subject for serious concern in 

its own right. Large commercial plantings - which attract subsidies 

in rich countries - create monoculture deserts and distort world 

markets. As a result, the poor producer in the south, who has 

traditionally grown a crop of one or two hectares, descends into a 

spiral of debt. The aggressive introduction of GM cotton will 

exacerbate all the problems of the conventional crop and, in 

developing countries, nullify centuries of successful local crop 

breeding by farmers, destroying their autonomy and control of seed, 

their livelihoods and cultural traditions.

 

 

 

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GMCFATW.php

 

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