Vietnam to test genetically-modified plants
Posted by:
Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: November 13, 2008 05:02PM
Under a government-approved roadmap, from now to 2010 Vietnam will
experimentally grow some kinds of genetically-modified trees in laboratories
and in the field.
In 2011, the country will plant genetically-modified species of maize,
cotton and soybean on a large scale, said scientists at a workshop on the
global influence of biotechnology-enhanced plants in Hanoi.
?The productivity of each hectare of maize in Vietnam is 4.5 tonnes. If
biotechnology is applied, Vietnam?s maize productivity would increase by 28%
while the cost would fall a lot,? said Graham Brookes from the British
Economic Institute.
In Asia, genetically-modified plants have a higher yield than normal
varieties, for example 20% more for soybean, 7% for maize, 15% for cotton,
and 3% for colza. Twenty-three countries in the world allow
genetically-modified plants. Around 670 products from genetically-modified
plants are sold in 53 countries.
In Vietnam, the Agricultural Hereditary Institute has compiled a set of
rules on testing and evaluating genetically-modified plants.
Nguyen Quoc Binh, Director of the HCM City Biotechnology Centre, said the
centre will grow an anti-pesticide maize variety, a genetically-modified
plant from the Philippines, on a trial basis.
According to this centre, this kind of tree can help increase farmers?
incomes by $100/ha/crop compared to normal maize trees though the price of
seeds is $20-30/ha higher than for normal seeds.
Vietnam has more than 1 million hectares of maize and if this variety is
grown, farmers could earn an additional $100 million/crop (four months).
www.checkbiotech.org