Zhai Huqu: Making technical preparations for transgenic technology
is very necessary for nation
HARBIN - The Chinese consume millions of tons of genetically
modified (GM) soybean oil every year without fuss despite the
fact that attitudes toward GM food remain as divergent in the
nation as they are in the rest of the world.
China needs to step up agricultural innovation, including development
of its own GM varieties, in response to climate change and to
reduce reliance on foreign technologies, top agricultural experts
and scientists told China Business Weekly last week.
The genetic modification of food involves the insertion of
genes from one variety of a crop to another in order to transfer
certain desired characteristics such as insect-resistance or
drought tolerance.
The technology is controversial. Critics say it is inherently
risky to mess with nature. Supporters say it will prevent food
shortages.
GM crops can provide solutions to various problems facing the
ecosystem such as limited land and water resources, scientists
say.
"Making technical preparations for transgenic technology
is very necessary for China," said Zhai Huqu, president
of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
However, the government has yet to approve use of the technology,
Zhai said.
Last year, China issued bio-safety certificates to two strains
of pest-resistant GM rice and corn. The strains still need about
three to five years of registration and production trials before
commercialization.
"Apart from transgenic soybean oil there should not be
any GM crops on the market," Zhai said.
China has been a net importer of soybeans since the mid-1990s.
Imported soybeans from the United States and Argentina are mainly
genetically modified.
China consumes about 10 million tons of soybean oil and about
40 million tons of soybean meal per year in processed food and
animal feedstuff, industry analysts said.
More than 80 percent of the total is imported GM soybean oil
or made from imported GM soybeans.
Approval has not been given for the import of GM crop seeds.
International companies such as Monsanto, which have already
sold seeds of GM cotton and conventional crops in China, have
started exploring the potential GM market in China.
The majority of US and Argentina corn producers have adopted
GM technologies, said Kevin Eblen, Monsanto's regional leader
in North Asia and president of Monsanto China.
"We are working to get those approvals in China,"
he said.
To make its seeds more adaptable to China's situation, the
company set up a research and development center in China last
December and carried out joint research with several Chinese
institutes.
"We are here in China to try to find the best products
for China's soil type, climate and environmental conditions,"
said Eblen.
He declined to reveal Monsanto's revenue or market share in
China. The published annual global revenue of the company is
roughly $11 billion.
China is the number one growth opportunity for Monsanto in
the long term, he said.
"China for us today is still a relatively small piece
of our overall business but, obviously, with the size of agriculture
here, particularly in crops that we are involved in, such as
corn, vegetables and cotton, there are opportunities for our
business here," he said.
Companies including Monsanto have developed crops with high
drought tolerance.
Chinese agricultural research institutes should catch up and
develop their own anti-drought crops to reduce possible reliance
on foreign technologies, said scientists.
"Currently we only deal with disasters such as droughts
or floods passively when they occur, which isn't a long-term
solution," said Wang Ren, director of the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research.
As climate change is bringing more uncertainties, it's urgent
for China to move quickly to develop its own anti-drought varieties,
both conventional and GM products, he said.
To ensure China's food security, the key is to enhance its
agricultural technology level in all aspects, Wang said.
"GM is a potential technology, but its development must
be well under the nation's transgenic safety and quality assessment
system. All things should be assessed under the framework,"
he warned.
The nation needs to carefully study what kind of products will
be needed in the next 15 years when investing in agricultural
technologies, said Fan Shenggen, director-general of the Washington-based
International Food Policy Research Institute.
Factors such as climate change and alterations to water resources
need to be taken into consideration when designing the plans,
he said.
Environmental groups such as Greenpeace have long expressed
concerns about the spread of GM food. Disputes over GM food
are most intense in Japan and Europe.
In February, the Indian government reserved a decision to allow
Monsanto to sell its GM eggplant crop in India. The decision
to commercialize the eggplant sparked concerns that the market
might be monopolized and the product could threaten the health
of humans.
Fan said GM technology provides a new choice. It's good for
increasing the income of farmers and reducing costs to consumers.
However, at the same time, new technologies always have risks.
Scientists should provide statistics and reports about any
impact on health and the environment. It must be the farmers
and consumers who make the final decision whether or not to
plant or consume GM food, said experts.
Fan urged the government to take environmental protection into
consideration in transgenic technology development from the
very beginning.
Anton Mangstl, director of the Office of Knowledge Exchanges,
Research and Extension of Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United States, said GM technology was one direction for
agriculture.
"If the technology can be used in a wise way, I personally
believe GM technology in the long term can be a contribution
to agricultural food security," he said.
The high level tolerance of some GM plants can address various
problems that the ecosystem is facing from such things as drought
and insects, said 2004 World Food Prize Laureate Monty Jones,
executive director of Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa.
"So far there are no major problems to health. I agree
there might be problems that have yet to be identified, but
the risks are very, very low," he said.
People for and against GM food should stop fighting and come
together, do surveys from time to time, every year or every
two years, look at the potential and the benefit and the risks,
if there are any, so they are able to advise the community,
he added.
"When you don't know something, how do you judge it? You
can't and shouldn't stop science, but choices should be made
by society. We can control it," said Ajit Maru of the Global
Forum on Agricultural Research.
About 40 percent of the food in the world is wasted in various
ways, either in losses or not eaten. The globe is not short
of food in that sense, but short of being able to use food effectively,
he added.