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Biotech benefits highlighted on 10th anniversary of first commercial biotech crop
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: December 13, 2005 07:00AM

www.checkbiotech.org ; www.raupp.info ; www.czu.cz

The 10th anniversary of the first commercially available biotech crop was
celebrated last night with a declaration by experts that agricultural
biotechnology has brought many benefits for farmers and the environment, and
its use will continue to grow exponentially, especially in developing
countries, December 2005.

At an event organized by CropLife International and EuropaBio, and
attended by around 100 policymakers, diplomats, academics, NGOs, media and
scientists, experts in the field of biotechnology from Brazil, the US and
the UK shared their different experiences with biotech cultivation and
regulation.

Alda Lerayer, Executive Director of CIB Brazil, said that since legalizing
biotech crop cultivation, her country has moved to the forefront of the huge
international market that has evolved in trade of biotech commodities.

"Last year Brazilian farmers planted around 2 million hectares of biotech
crops, she said. "The potential for us to continue to produce GM crops and
supply an increasingly demanding international market is enormous."

Underlining the widespread level of acceptance of GM crops among farmers,
Ms. Lerayer added that 32 percent of Brazil's total biotech soybean harvest
comes from family farms.

"What we are finding is that these technologies are also being embraced by
the small farmers and making a real difference to their lives," she said.

Providing a US perspective, where commercial biotech crop cultivation has
become widely practiced since its introduction in 1996, US State Department
Senior Advisor for Agricultural Biotechnology Madelyn Spirnak said that most
Americans accepted biotechnology as an everyday part of their lives.

"Most of the time we just don't think about it," she said. "The degree of
consumer acceptance is so high in the US, we trust that whatever is on our
shelves is safe to eat."

Acknowledging that GM foods were "not a panacea" to problems of food
security and poverty, she said they were "a very important tool which
shouldn't be denied to the people of the world." Ms. Spirnak added that
benefits to farmers of planting biotech crops includes reduced soil tillage,
greater flexibility in planting and increased profits.

Third generation British farmer, Paul Temple provided a European farmer's
perspective to the gathering, describing biotech crop cultivation as
"precision farming at its best". Speaking from personal experience, Mr.
Temple said that "science was the future of sustainable farming".

"I used to be a sceptic, but having seen the benefits of biotechnology, I am
now a convert," he said. "I used less fuel, saw an increase in wildlife
habitats on my farm and had less troublesome weeds which are very expensive
to control."

Citing the experience of Spain - the only EU country currently harvesting
significant amount biotech crops - Mr. Temple said that, unless Europe
becomes more flexible in its approach to biotechnologies, it risked "falling
far behind the rest of the world".

CropLife International Director-General Christian Verschueren said of
evening's speakers, "Their testimony to the clear benefits of biotechnology
comes from first hand experience."

"I believe there is a bright future for this remarkable technology - and
that the mood in Europe towards biotech products is becoming progressively
more positive. Pressure is also growing from many farmers who,
understandably, want to be free to choose which seed varieties they grow. In
the next ten years, we will see even more benefits for consumers and
sustainable agriculture," he said.

CropLife International has recently launched a searchable database of
peer-reviewed scientific papers highlighting the safety and benefits of
plant biotechnology, which can be accessed at
www.croplife.org/biotechdatabase.

[allafrica.com]

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