World needs GMO wheat
to fight hunger-wheat body
* Rich countries should promote GM wheat to help poor ones.
* Gains in wheat yields have fallen since 1961.
* World wheat reserves last only 53 days.
By James Grubel
Reuters, Wednesday September 3 2008
Guardian -
CANBERRA, Sept 3 (Reuters) - Japan and Europe need to
embrace genetically modified wheat to combat food shortages in poor countries,
rather than pander to consumer fears, the head of a global wheat research
institute said on Wednesday.
Resistance from the public and consumer groups in rich
countries to genetically modified (GM) wheat has forced major producing
countries, such as
But GM crops can boost yields and help poor countries feed
their people at a time of food shortages and rising world prices, said Thomas
Lumpkin, head of the Mexico-based International Maize and Wheat Improvement
Centre.
"Governments should try to help the public appreciate
how much the high price of food affects the poor in developing countries,"
Lumpkin told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday. "By denying them this
technology, you are keeping them hungry, they are dying."
Wheat and maize account for 40 percent of the world's food
and 25 percent of calories consumed in developing countries, according to the
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation.
Wheat prices have risen strongly over the past two years,
more than doubling from 2006 to March 2008's peak of $454 a tonne,
before falling back. Food prices rose 50 percent worldwide over the same
period.
The maize and wheat improvement centre, or CIMMYT, is a
global wheat research centre with offices in 100 developing countries, and aims
to improve livelihoods and boost food security in developing nations.
No commercial transgenic wheat currently exists in world
markets due to strong opposition by consumer and environmental groups in many
countries.
But several biotech crop developers, notably Monsanto Co and
Syngenta ,
have done extensive work in developing different types of biotech wheat.
Monsanto, however, has shelved its herbicide-resistant wheat project and Syngenta has slowed the pace of its work on a disease-resistant wheat because of the widespread
opposition.
The European Union has not approved any genetically modified
crops for a decade and the 27 member countries often clash on the issue.
"That is really holding up
Countries that imposed bans on genetically modified crops,
including Australia's largest wheat growing state of Western Australia, he
said, were being short sighted and "pandering to the fears of
voters."
Genetic science was needed to help boost wheat yields, which
currently have annual gains of less than 2 percent, far lower than yield gains
of over 10 percent annually up to the early 1960s, Lumpkin said.
And with the increased problems of climate change and the
need to produce more food without hurting the environment, scientific
breakthroughs are needed to bring about a 50 to 100 percent improvement in crop
yields, he added.
At the same time, world grain reserves have shrunk, with 53
days worth of supply grain worldwide in 2008, compared with 115 days of supply
seven years ago. This could lead to a humanitarian crisis if
"If we get a major drought in those countries, then
prices will be up to five times what they are today," he said.
"People will die, a lot of people will die."
In June, Australian researchers, who were developing a drought-tolerant wheat, achieved early success in field trials and hope to have the world's first transgenic wheat in farmers' hands in five to 10 years.
(Editing by Ben Tan)
guardian.co.uk