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The cost-effective way to feed the world
Margaret Mellon and Doug Gurian-Sherman
The Bellingham Herald, 20 June 2011
http://bit.ly/l4nzv0

By 2050, the world will have to feed 9 billion people, adapt to climate change,
reduce agricultural pollution, and protect fresh water supplies - all at the
same time. Given that formidable challenge, what are the quickest, most
cost-effective ways to develop more productive, drought-, flood- and
pest-resistant crops?

Some will claim that genetically engineered (GE) crops are the solution. But
when compared side-by-side, classical plant breeding bests genetic engineering.
Coupled with ecologically based management methods that reduce the environmental
harm of crop production, classical breeding could go a long way toward producing
the food we will need by mid-century.

Producing better crops faster certainly would help the world feed itself, but
genetic engineering has no advantage on that score. Not only can classical
breeding programs introduce new varieties about as fast as genetic engineering, 
technical improvements are making classical practices even faster.

Early steps in the genetic engineering process avoid the multiple rounds of
cross-breeding inherent in classical plant breeding by directly inserting
engineered genes into the crop. But seed companies then use classical breeding
to transfer engineered genes to the crop's numerous varieties for different
markets and climates - and that takes time. And just as in classical breeding, 
new engineered varieties must be tested in the field for several years to ensure
they perform as expected.

Second, GE crops are significantly more expensive to develop. Industry estimates
of the cost of developing a single GE trait are in excess of $100 million. By
contrast, a classical breeding program for similar traits typically  costs about
$1 million. Most of the cost differential is attributable to GE  crops' research
and development requirements, which include DNA synthesizers and  sequencers and
other expensive equipment, in addition to classical breeding    facilities.

Genetic engineering might be worth the extra cost if classical breeding were
unable to impart such desirable traits as drought-, flood- and pest-resistance,
and fertilizer efficiency. But in case after case, classical breeding is
delivering the goods.

Plant breeders have already produced drought-tolerant varieties of sorghum,
corn, rice, cassava and pearl millet - all critical for poor farmers in
developing countries. Genetic engineering, meanwhile, has yet to commercialize
its first drought-tolerant crop varieties. U.S. biotech companies have been
working for years on drought tolerance, but two of the three varieties they plan
to introduce within the next two years are the result of classical breeding.

Scientists using classical breeding enhanced with genomic information - a
process called marker-assisted breeding - also have produced rice varieties that 
can tolerate flooding. These varieties, now cultivated in the Philippines,
Bangladesh and India, are expected to increase food security for 70 million of
the world's poorest people.

Classical breeders likewise have developed papaya resistant to ringspot virus
and corn that can fend off destructive rootworms - traits previously touted as
requiring genetic engineering. And in Uganda, scientists have successfully bred
sweet potatoes to resist virus diseases, while a multimillion-dollar, multi-year
project in Kenya to genetically engineer similar virus resistance failed.

Finally, classical breeding and better farm management are responsible for all
the yield increases for soybeans and most of the yield increases for corn in 
the United States. Recent yield increases are often erroneously attributed to 
genetic engineering, but data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and 
academic scientists show that even during the past 15 years that GE crops have 
been commercialized, classical breeding and crop management improvements 
contributed the large majority of the increases, not the newly inserted  genes.

Public sector crop breeders have succeeded despite shoestring budgets at public
universities, international institutes and the USDA. By contrast, the biotech
industry's lavish budgets have produced commercial crops with only two types of
GE traits. More than 60 percent of all GE crops planted worldwide are  merely
designed to survive being doused with herbicides.

So if the conventional wisdom is wrong, and classical breeding is superior, what
does that mean for public policy?

Federal and state governments should dramatically increase their support for
tried-and-true, cost-effective classical breeding technology - including  better
funding for breeding programs at public universities and nonprofit institutes
where breeders can work with farmers to develop a wider range of farmer-ready
crop varieties. Big biotech companies do not focus on small-acreage  crops,
which include most fruits and vegetables. Nor do they market many classically
improved varieties without including their patented engineered traits, which
doesn't help farmers who don't want to grow GE seeds or pay the high prices
biotech companies charge for them.

We are not suggesting that genetic engineering has no role to play in developing
improved crops. But its modest contributions come with an extremely high price
tag. If we are going to meet the challenges of feeding a growing population and
protecting the environment, the scientific evidence says we place our bets on
technology that works - classical breeding.

ABOUT THE WRITERS

Margaret Mellon is the director of the Union of Concerned Scientists' Food and
Environment Program. Doug Gurian-Sherman is a senior scientist in same program.
Readers may write to them at: Union of Concerned Scientists, 1825 K  Street NW,
Suite 800, Washington, D.C. 20006-1232; website: _www.ucsusa.org_
(http://www.ucsusa.org <http://www.ucsusa.org> ) .



The Genetic Engineering Blog is produced by Thomas Wittman and EcoFarm, and supported by a generous donation from the Newman's Own Foundation.

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