REPORT
India,
the GM-trashbin
While the world wakes to the
human health and environment nuisance of genetically modified
crops, India is fast turning into a dustbin for the new technology.
by Devinder Sharma
Not all GM decisions are taken in accordance
with scientific principles. India, which has become a favoured
destination for the biotechnology industry that is virtually
on the run from the United States, European Union and Australia,
is a case in point. Besides cotton, genetic engineering experiments
are being conducted in India on maize, mustard, sugarcane,
sorghum, pigeonpea, chickpea, rice, tomato, brinjal, potato,
banana, papaya, cauliflower, oilseeds, castor, soybean and
medicinal plants. The developments in the area of legislation
with regard to GM foods in other parts of the world reveal
a different trend.
In March 2004, Western Australia became the
first Australian state to ban outright planting of GM food
crops. Within a few days of this decision, Victoria imposed
a four year moratorium on the cultivation of GM oilseeds rape
to ‘protect its clean and green’ image. South
Australia and Tasmania have also banned GM crops. In the United
States, Mendocino County of California became the country’s
first to ban the raising and keeping of genetically engineered
crops or animals. In March, the state of Vermont, in a historic
decision, voted overwhelmingly to support a bill to hold biotech
corporations liable for unintended contamination of conventional
or organic crops by genetically engineered plant materials.
The trend is the same across the ocean, in
the United Kingdom. The dramatic turnaround by Bayer Crop
Science to give up attempts to commercialise GM maize, has
ensured that the country remains GM free till at least 2008.
Despite Tony Blair’s blind love for industry, tough
GM regulatory regime has come in the way of the adoption of
the technology. In Japan, consumer groups announced their
intention to present a petition signed by over a million to
Canada’s Agriculture and Agri-Food Minister, Bob Speller.
Japan is one of the biggest markets for Canadian wheat, and
the petition calls for a ban on GE wheat in Canada.
In sharp contrast to what is happening in
the developed North, in April, the Genetic Engineering Approval
Committee (GEAC) in India approved yet another Bt cotton variety
for the central and southern regions amidst reports that the
go-ahead came without adequate scientific testing. The approval
also comes at a time when the United States Department of
Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) is seeking public comment on petitions from Mycogen
Seeds to deregulate two lines of genetically engineered insect-resistant
cotton. APHIS is seeking public comment on whether these cotton
lines pose a plant pest risk.
Fast buck
Such has been the casual approach to regulate this most controversial
technology that it has become practically difficult to keep
track of the new GEAC chief. They keep on changing at a pace
faster than that expected from musical chairs. At the same
time, while the UK has set in place a tough regulatory regime
making the companies liable for any environmental mishap,
India continues to ignore this aspect. The regulations that
the GEAC had announced at the time of according approval to
Bt cotton in 2002 were only aimed at pacifying the media.
The GEAC has not been held accountable for its deliberate
attempts to obfuscate public opinion, and it all seems part
of an effort to help the seed industry make a fast buck.
It is a widely accepted fact that the safety
regulations, including the mandatory buffer zone or refuge
around the Bt cotton fields, were not adhered to. Yet the
Ministry of Environment and Forests in New Delhi refrained
from penalising the seed company. Nor did it direct Mahyco-Monsanto
to compensate crop losses that the farmers suffered in the
very first year of planting Bt cotton in 2002-03. That the
crop had failed to yield the desired results was even highlighted
in a parliamentary committee report.
While an NGO petition before the Central Vigilance
Commission (CVC) seeking an enquiry into the entire monitoring,
evaluation and approval process was ignored, the US authorities
have launched an investigation into reports of alleged bribing
of Indonesian government officials who approved Bt cotton.
Both the US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange
Commission are examining whether a former consultant to Monsanto
made an improper USD 50,000 payment in early 2002. Reuters
reports that the company is one of the world's leading developers
of genetically modified seeds, but has had trouble getting
some of its biotech crops approved in overseas, including
biotech cotton introduced in Indonesia in 2001. Monsanto closed
down the biotech cotton sales operations in 2003 after two
unsuccessful years that came amid complaints over yields and
pricing.

The North is not happy either.
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In Europe, a 2002 survey showed that 61 per
cent of the private sector cancelled research and development
activities as a result of moratorium actions. With highly
critical reports of regulatory mechanisms coming in from respectable
independent institutions, the trend in the US is also towards
tougher regulations. This has forced biotechnology companies
to even grow the next generation of GM crops in abandoned
mines, using artificial lighting and air filtration to prevent
pollen movement.
In India, however, experiments are even underway
on several species of fish. In fact, such is the desperation
that scientists are trying to insert Bt gene into any crop
they can lay their hands on, not caring of any of the possible
outcomes. The mad race for GM experiments is the outcome of
more funding from biotech companies as well as support from
the World Bank, the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO)
and the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR).
Interestingly, while the rest of the world
is stopping GM research in the tracks lest it destroy farm
trade opportunities due to public rejection of genetically
engineered food products, the Indian Council for Agricultural
Research (ICAR) merrily continues to sow a seeds of thorns
for agricultural exports thereby jeopardising the future of
domestic farming. But then, who cares for the farmers as long
as GM research ensures the livelihood security for a few thousand
agricultural scientists.
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