GM WATCH COMMENT: Here's the gene-bashers' latest wheeze for feeding the poor and hungry: take the unwanted toxic by-product of a toxic industry, cottonseeds, manipulate the genes so that the toxins are at "a level that is considered safe for human consumption", and get the poor to eat the result!!!
Or here's a different notion. Why not set aside a proportion of land currently used to grow cash crops for export and give it back to the people to farm by sustainable methods, to feed themselves. It's known that farmers can easily be schooled in low-input, organic and permaculture methods, that can be used to vastly increase the yield and variety of crops grown on a given piece of ground in the developing world over against any high-input expensive intensively managed system.
http://www.members.tripod.com/~ngin/article2.htm
http://www.biotech-info.net/ordinary_miracle.html
But of course, that would put land and food back in the hands of farmers - the very last thing the biotech industry wants.
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GM COTTONSEEDS COULD FEED WORLD'S STARVING MILLIONS
Jonathan Leake, Science Editor The Sunday Times, November 19 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2460161.html
SCIENTISTS have genetically modified the cotton plant's naturally toxic seeds to turn them into a potential food source for millions of people.
Researchers have found a way of reducing gossypol, a powerful toxin in the seeds, to a negligible level that allows them to be consumed by humans. At present they are thrown away or fed to cows.
Dr Keerti Rathore, a plant technologist at Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, which carried out the research, said enough cotton was already planted worldwide to supply the protein needs of 500m people.
"The exciting finding is that we have been able to reduce gossypol to a level that is considered safe for human consumption," said Rathore, whose findings will appear in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Further field and safety trials are needed but if successful the technique could turn out to be the "killer application" that supporters of GM technology have long hoped for. They believe environmentalists would find it hard to object to a crop with the potential to reduce world hunger on such a scale.
Gossypol is not just toxic but is also a powerful natural male contraceptive. The sperm of men who eat foods containing gossypol become deactivated.
Cotton plants secrete the toxin into their stems, leaves and seeds because it affects pests in the same way, inhibiting their breeding and reducing their numbers.
Rathore and his colleagues got round this problem using a relatively new technique known as RNA interference, or RNAi, to suppress one of the key genes involved in producing gossypol. "Very few people realise that for every pound of cotton fibre the plant produces 1.6lb of seed," said Rathore.
"Overall, the world produces 44m tons of cottonseed each year containing about 22% high-quality protein."
Scientists have created cotton plants without gossypol before, through conventional breeding techniques, but they were attacked by pests. Rathore's method strips gossypol from the seeds only, leaving the rest of the plant protected.
For farmers there will be a potential surge in the value of a crop that can be sold for food as well as clothing. Environmentalists, however, remain sceptical. They point to similar claims made for crops such as golden rice, which was genetically engineered to contain vitamin A. It subsequently emerged that people would need to eat huge amounts to gain any benefit.
Sue Mayer, the director of GeneWatch UK, urged caution. "Poverty and hunger are complex problems caused by bad government, poor economies and war," she said. "It is not just a matter of finding a new wonder plant."
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"Low-tech 'sustainable agriculture,' shunning chemicals in favour of natural pest control and fertiliser, is pushing up crop yields on poor farms across the world, often by 70 per cent or more...
The findings will make sobering reading for people convinced that only genetically modified crops can feed the planet's hungry in the 21st century... A new science-based revolution is gaining strength built on real research into what works best on the small farms where a billion or more of the world's hungry live and work... It is time for the major agricultural research centres and their funding agencies to join the revolution." - New Scientist editorial, February 3 2001