The Real Villain in the World Food Crisis

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Posted May 19, 2008 | 04:14 PM (EST)




What's behind the world food crisis? Yes, the growing world population is a huge contributor to the need for more food. Yes, reckless food- and oil-seed-based biofuel subsidies have added to the problem. Yes, the climate crisis will contribute enormously. Yes, greater prosperity by previously vegetarian consumers in India and China will increase demand for feed grains.

But the media only occasionally touch on why we are having this particular food crisis: market fundamentalism and the privatization of world food security. Sunday's New York Times has a devastating article on the dismantling over the past 20 years of the network of publicly funded and accountable agricultural research centers.

What was supposed to take the place of public research? Privatized, market-driven, corporate research. How were they going to ensure food security? By developing genetically modified foods. What would motivate them? Profit -- geared to patented GMO (genetically modified organism) seed varieties. These patented seeds would cost more, but farmers' yields would go up so much that the world would be better off. Unfortunately, the hard truth is that GMOs have actually made the world's food supply smaller -- because the varieties developed for crops like soy beans and cotton, thus far at least, have yields that are lower than the conventional strains they replace.

This might mean that GMO crops simply can't produce the continually increasing crop yields that their advocates have promised. But it is also fair to say that we have no real idea whether they can or can't, because the privatized market for developing GMOs has almost no interest in crop yield per se -- it has been developed for purposes such as making crops that are more tolerant of the herbicide Roundup.

In fact, the Department of Agriculture concedes that not a single GMO crop on today's market was designed to increase yields. By contrast, the entire focus of the publicly funded agricultural research that led to the Green Revolution was increased yields.

For years a staple of the literature advocating GMO crops has been salt-tolerant barley for marginal soils in Africa. I'm not a crop scientist, so I have no idea whether salt-tolerant barley is feasible -- and if it is feasible, no idea whether GMO crops are the most likely pathway to develop it. But I know enough economics to be pretty sure that Monsanto won't get rich selling the seeds of a GMO salt-tolerant barley to marginal farmers in Mauritania -- the market is neither big enough nor rich enough. Wheat farmers in the Dakotas are a much better investment for Monsanto, especially when they are backed by huge crop subsidies, and the company has followed the market signals. As a result, virtually all the crops emerging from the privatized corporate agricultural research establishment are designed not to increase yields or to lower costs but to increase resistance to herbicides or a narrow range of first-world pests.

Even today, we don't need GMO rice to fight the current devastating outbreak of brown plant hopper on Asian rice fields. The International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) has identified more than a dozen conventional varieties that could produce resistance if they were crossbred into the commercial types in common use in Asia. But the IRRI lacks the funds to do the necessary work. And private seed companies lack the financial inventive, because the hopper continually evolves, so even if a private food corporation developed a resistant variety, it could market it for only a few years. Seed sales just wouldn't make a big enough profit.

As a result, we have poor farmers in India committing suicide because their GMO cotton crops didn't meet expectations or failed; we have governments trembling from Haiti to Afghanistan because their people can no longer afford to eat; we have newly empowered pests chewing their way through the world's rice paddy fields; we have inadequate stores of grain to survive even modest droughts in Australia -- and we act as if this should be a surprise.

It's not as if this is a new problem. At least as far back as the Irish potato famine, it has been clear that unregulated markets can't handle the inevitable ups and downs of food production. Ireland actually had plenty of food to feed itself, but Victorian market fundamentalists insisted that most of it be exported. Then, as now, intentional public policy was needed to avoid famine and starvation.

Dare we hope that this fall that the Presidential candidates will actually be asked about this issue? Only if we insist. And the debate will be meaningful only if we ask the hard questions about why we have abandoned publicly funded and accountable agricultural policy mechanisms for the long-discredited concept that privatization of research and market fundamentalism will feed the world.

 
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"I'm not a crop scientist, so I have no idea whether salt-tolerant barley is feasible" -- Then why are you commenting on an issue which you have absolutely no clue about. The truth is GMO have increased crop yields. If they didn"t, then why would farmers buy them? Do you really think farmers are that stupid? 2007 was actually a record corn harvest. The only GMO crops on the market are soybean, cotton, and corn so I don"t think you can blame GMOs for a poor potato harvest. Food prices are rising because of oil, which increases the price of ethanol, which increases the price of corn. More farmers are growing corn for this reason, and not growing food crops. Combine these issues with the fact that China and India are purchasing more food on the world market and poor harvests in other world areas due to drought and you pretty much have a perfect storm. The food shortage is a serious issue and is going to require a serious solution and people like Mr. Carl Pope aren"t helping. It would be great if all the food we ate was organic, but the fact is, we cannot sustain a population of 7 billion people on organic farming. So who is going to go so Carl Pope can live his dream which everyone is eating organic food? Are we going to increase our farm acreage and say screw global warming? It is a complex problem needing a realitic solution.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 PM on 05/20/2008



Thanks Carl.

Peter Jennings was on the View a couple of weeks ago ridiculing the hippies who now shop at Whole Foods.

He said something like "for a group who would ingest anything to get high to now be concerned about what they put in their bodies is ridiculous"... and he got a big laugh.

He, like most Americans, seem unaware that hippies re-started the organic farming movement... a movement that rejects GMO's and pesticide use.

I'm not sure who to blame for farmers adopting corporate seed use... the Ag dept. and the media seem likely culprits... but for the life of me I can't understand why they haven't reverted to open-source seed where they can plant seed they collected the year before and avoid those costs. Organic farming methods have developed to reduce the impact of pests too.

As the number of farmers dwindles, and those remaining get sued when their fields are contaminated by GMO's, the one thing we do know is that the huge corporate farms won't be the ones to adopt organic methods and end the "seed wars" that reduce yields while requiring chemicals that pollute our air, land and water.

It will require action from Congress against the big money lobbyists' pressure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 PM on 05/19/2008


Thanks Carl.

Peter Jennings was on the View a couple of weeks ago ridiculing the hippies who now shop at Whole Foods.

He said something like "for a group who would ingest anything to get high to now be concerned about what they put in their bodies is ridiculous"... and he got a big laugh.

He, like most Americans, seem unaware that hippies re-started the organic farming movement... a movement that rejects GMO's and pesticide use.

I'm not sure who to blame for farmers adopting corporate seed use... the Ag dept. and the media seem likely culprits... but for the life of me I can't understand why they haven't reverted to open-source seed where they can plant seed they collected the year before and avoid those costs. Organic farming methods have developed to reduce the impact of pests too.

As the number of farmers dwindles, and those remaining get sued when their fields are contaminated by GMO's, the one thing we do know is that the huge corporate farms won't be the ones to adopt organic methods and end the "seed wars" that reduce yields while requiring chemicals that pollute our air, land and water.

It will require action from Congress against the big money lobbyists' pressure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 PM on 05/19/2008

End hunger-open more KFCs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 05/19/2008
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