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Sowing disaster?
October 28
The Nation
It's an hour-and-a-half drive over switchbacks
from the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca to the village of Capulalpan,
a settlement of some 1,500 people nestled in the Sierra Norte Mountains.
The thick forest and remoteness of this mountainous region has long
enabled the local Zacateca Indians to maintain their cultural integrity
and, to a great extent, write their own rules. When Mexican clocks
were turned back for daylight saving time in the spring, the Zacatecans
refused to make the adjustment, insisting that they live in "God's
time," not in what they derisively call "Fox time,"
referring to President Vicente Fox in far-off Mexico City. Carlos
Castaneda wrote about this region as a center for natural transcendence
in his book Journey to Ixtlan. But over the past year, this tiny
puebla among the cedars and the wild mustard of the Sierra Norte
has been unwillingly thrust into the center of a worldwide controversy
over something quite different than the quality of its peyote: genetically
engineered corn.
Last winter a team of plant scientists from the
University of California, Berkeley, published a paper in the journal
Nature asserting that the genes from genetically altered corn had
been discovered in the local varieties of corn grown here in Capulalpan.
The news traveled quickly. The biotechnology industry has long claimed
that genetic engineering is predictable: that the genes end up where
they are put, and that their presence in the environment can be
controlled. But the discovery of genetically engineered (GE) corn
in Capulalpan appeared to defy those claims. In 1998 the Mexican
government outlawed the planting--although not the eating--of GE
corn, in order to protect the genetic diversity of the crop that
is the country's most important food supply.
Preserving the rich genetic diversity of Capulalpan's
corn is a matter of more than sentimental significance. When disaster
strikes corn anywhere in the world--disease, too much rain, not
enough rain, a new pest--plant scientists traditionally come to
this region, which stretches from the Sierra Norte Mountains down
to the southernmost state of Chiapas and into Guatemala, for the
germ plasm to rejuvenate beleaguered domestic varieties. Genetic
diversity is what provides a hedge against unanticipated environmental
changes. In the state of Oaxaca alone, corn grows in sixty different
varieties, in shades of blue, black, purple and white, as well as
the yellow that we have come to associate with our most widely grown
crop.
"This is the world's insurance policy,"
says Mauricio Bellon, director of the economics programs at the
International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), the world's
foremost public research facility for corn. "The diversity
of these land races, these genes, is the basis of our food supply.
We'll have great science, we'll have great breeding, but at the
end of the day, the base [of this crop] is here. We need this diversity
to cope with the unpredictable.... The climate changes, new plant
diseases and pests continue to evolve. Diseases we thought we had
controlled come back. We don't know what's going to happen in the
future, and so we need to keep our options open. And this,"
says Bellon, in the middle of a Oaxacan cornfield, "is what
keeps our options open."
The villagers in Capulalpan had no idea what
genetic engineering was until they found the errant genes in their
fields. Genetic engineering involves introducing genes from a separate
organism into corn--or any of a number of other food crops--in order
to express a desired trait. Olga Maldonado, the first villager in
Capulalpan to discover transgenic elements in her corn, found the
very concept bewildering. "Maybe it comes from some other plant,"
she said, "or animal--it has another ingredient that's different
from corn."
Americans, too, might be blindsided by such a
revelation, even though most of us eat genetically engineered products
practically every day. Walk through your local supermarket, and
you'll find it in breakfast cereals, canned drinks, processed foods
of every sort. Unless it's duly labeled, chances are anything with
processed soy or corn has been genetically modified. The most popular
sweetener today is not sugar, but corn syrup--and most corn syrup
is made from genetically modified corn. GE corn and soybeans are
fed to animals, so it's in our beef, our pork, our chicken and our
milk. Over the past five years, the products of genetic engineering
have slipped almost unnoticed into the American food system. Though
there is no hard evidence that these products are harmful to human
health, foreign and domestic scientists and activists are questioning
their long-term impact on the environment, whether their much-heralded
benefits are actually coming true and whether the introduction of
what is, in essence, a new living organism into the ecosystem can
be so easily controlled. And now here these organisms were in Mexico--which
had banned the planting of genetically engineered crops four years
ago. If the genetic traces could make their way all the way to tiny
Capulalpan, where else are they going to go?
I am walking through Olga Maldonado's field in
Capulalpan. A Zacateca Indian with a broad, weathered face, Olga
now approaches her field, where her ancestors have farmed for centuries,
with a new diffidence and uncertainty. "I only know that I
am afraid," she says.
Her field is on a hillside over the town, with
a sweeping view of the Sierra valleys below. The field itself is
a patch of perhaps 200 plants; you can walk from one end to the
other in about a minute. But it's enough to produce food for her,
her husband and their young children for most of the year.
The problems surfaced when Olga first discerned
that some of the corn in her field did not have the hardiness to
which she was accustomed. Several others in the village were having
similar problems: nothing devastating, just that their yields were
off, and in an area where corn is central to the region's economic
and cultural life, that registers as a significant event.
How could transgenic crops have made it into
the fields in this remote location in Mexico? In Capulalpan, Olga
herself remembers buying some corn from the local store, where imported
kernels are sold by the crate (and are, legally, only supposed to
be ground up for food). She didn't know about the government ban
on planting, and she figured she'd try some of it out in her fields.
"I planted that corn out of curiosity," she says. "I
bought it at the government store and planted it to see if it was
better than ours. And because there was more corn in each plant."
But later, when the corn had problems maturing,
she had her plants tested at a small laboratory located on the cusp
of a hillside overlooking the Sierra valley, in the town of La Trinidad.
There, the UC Berkeley microbiologist Ignacio Chapela had helped
to establish a genetic testing facility as part of a successful
effort to demonstrate to Japanese buyers that the large, brimmed
fungi that grow wild at the foot of the trees in the surrounding
forest and look like shiitake mushrooms actually are shiitake mushrooms.
Every month traders make the trek to Capulalpan to purchase mushrooms,
which are flown express to Japan, providing much-needed cash to
the community. This time, however, the lab discovered something
it didn't want: Within the genome of Olga's corn kernels--varieties
that have grown here for centuries--was, suddenly, evidence of genetic
manipulation. The lab ultimately found that fifteen of the twenty-two
corn samples it tested from the surrounding mountain communities
also had traces of transgenes.
Genetic engineering has transformed American
agriculture: In just six years, 34 percent of our corn, 75 percent
of our soy, 70 percent of our cotton and 15 percent of our canola
is genetically engineered. Genetically engineered potatoes, tomatoes
and wheat are also headed toward mass production. The critical forces
behind the development of the technology itself are just five companies--Dow,
DuPont, Syngenta, Aventis and Monsanto--which control three out
of every four patents issued over the past ten years for genetically
modified crops. And fully 90 percent of the genetically modified
seed technology planted around the world is either owned by or licensed
by one company, Monsanto, according to the ETC Group (erosion, technology
and concentration), a sustainable-agriculture NGO that has followed
changes in the seed industry over the past two decades. According
to an assessment by Chemical and Engineering News, just two companies--DuPont
(owner of Pioneer and other smaller seed companies) and Monsanto--control
nearly three-quarters of the US corn-seed market. These companies
are now anxious to export the rapid advances the technology has
made across America.
But the very idea of manipulating the genetic
structure of a living organism has caused unease around the world.
While I and a production crew from the PBS newsmagazine show NOW
With Bill Moyers (which aired a version of this story on October
4) were visiting Olga Maldonado in Mexico last summer, half a world
away, two southern African countries, Zambia and Zimbabwe, were
refusing to accept American donations of genetically engineered
corn to help them contend with a food crisis that was sending tens
of thousands of people into starvation. The European Union was facing
down a possible US challenge at the World Trade Organization over
European restrictions on imports of genetically engineered food.
In countries as far afield as France, India and New Zealand, the
new technology was sparking anti-American demonstrations. The release
of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) into the environment would
later emerge as one of the most contentious issues to be discussed
at the Earth Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa. Altogether, more
than thirty countries have imposed either a total ban or heavy restrictions
on GMO imports from the United States.
The news from Mexico stoked fears around the
world that genetic engineering is out of control. While Ignacio
Chapela and his graduate student David Quist's discovery ignited
a firestorm of controversy by scientists who criticized their work,
in August a study commissioned by Mexico's National Institute of
Ecology confirmed their findings: Transgenic corn genes were in
Oaxacan corn. "What is most important about these findings,"
Exequiel Ezcurra, president of the institute, told the newspaper
La Jornada, "is that transgenic creations move quickly into
the environment and that it's time to reconsider ways of insuring
our bio-security."
Nobody knows for sure what precise variety of
transgenes wound up in Capulalpan corn. Dr. Norman Ellstrand, professor
of genetics at the University of California, Riverside, and one
of the country's foremost experts on corn genetics, says that the
corn in Capulalpan could contain any number of characteristics that
have been engineered into American corn. Since corn is openly pollinated,
he explains, pollen from one plant can blow or be transported in
some other way to fertilize another plant. "And if just 1 percent
of [American] experimental pollen escaped into Mexico, that means
those land races could potentially be making medicines or industrial
chemicals or things that are not so good for people to eat. Right
now, we just don't know what's in there."
Chances are good, however, according to Ellstrand,
that the genes are from Bt corn, a popular US corn variety genetically
engineered to produce its own toxins against a pest known as the
European corn borer. The borer presents a sporadically serious threat
to US and European cornfields but is rare in Mexico. Ellstrand says
there would likely be no immediate damaging effects from the presence
of Bt corn in Mexico, but what frightens him is how much we don't
know: This year, he is researching how long transgenes will persist
in native varieties--whether, in fact, they can ever be bred out
of the population. This is a question that until now has not even
been studied.
At least for the foreseeable future, then, here
in the heart of the world's reservoir for genetic diversity of corn
will be transgenes developed for the vast rolling flatlands of American
corn country--where, in just six years, Bt corn has moved from laboratory
petri dishes into one of every five acres of cornfield.
Frank McLain shifts the gears on his 1982 pickup
as we drive through his family's cornfields in central Iowa. This
land has been in his family for five generations, since it was homesteaded
in 1862. "What they passed on to me is the feeling that this
land is not just a hunk of dirt that you use and sell," he
says, "that a piece of ground is something that should be kept
for the next generation; that you're just a steward and you're not
just to use it as a tool or as a doormat."
Frank is the first in his family to plant transgenic
crops. On the left side of the road, we're passing a field of Bt
corn; on the right, Roundup Ready soybeans. Monsanto's Bt corn contains
a gene inserted from a bacteria that prompts the plant to produce
its own insecticide; when the corn borer eats it, the plant's toxins
go to work in its digestive tract, literally blowing up its stomach.
It means that Frank has cut in half the amount of pesticides he
used to have to apply to his corn. And Monsanto's Roundup Ready
soybean seeds have been genetically altered--using a gene from a
bacterium--in a way that enables them to resist the application
of Monsanto's own herbicide, Roundup. "When I was a kid you'd
see grass or other weeds poking up in these fields, and we'd have
to go through and chop them out with hoes or shovels or whatever
to clean them up manually or mechanically as best we could,"
Frank explains. "Now it's pretty easy to come in here with
a [Roundup] sprayer and accomplish the same thing."
Frank's experience with genetic engineering illustrates
both the allure and the potential dangers of the new technology.
For many American farmers, genetically engineered crops offer a
level of predictability in a business that can rise or fall with
a few degrees Fahrenheit each season.
Twenty years ago I visited Frank and his father,
Fred, while reporting a story on the American seed industry. At
the time, the industry was undergoing rapid consolidation as regionally
based seed companies were being bought out by large multinational
pesticide and pharmaceutical companies. Hundreds of locally bred
seed varieties were being phased out in favor of hybrids that could
be grown in broad swaths of land across America.
I talked with the McLains then about what effect
this consolidation would have on genetic diversity. They had lived
through the infamous corn blight of 1970, a year in which 15 percent
of the US corn crop was devastated by a blight that attacked a single
hybridized corn variety that had been planted in one out of four
acres from Florida to the Midwest. Meat prices shot up that year,
as most of the lost corn was being grown as cattle feed. The reason
for the blight was subsequently identified by the National Academy
of Sciences as genetic uniformity: Corn seed across the country
was, the academy reported, "as alike as identical twins."
Fred told me how he watched as his plants became black and shriveled
under the corrosive effects of the blight. When scientists quickly
raced another slew of corn varieties onto the market for the following
season, they relied on genetic material contained in traditional
corn varieties, whose roots could be traced back to those land races
around Oaxaca.
I hadn't seen the McLains since the summer of
1982, except once the following year, during a cross-country trip
when Fred and his wife, Donnie, graciously laid out a lunch for
me when I pulled into their farm, located just off Highway 30. At
the time, Monsanto had just announced the creation of the first
transgenic plant, launching the technology that would later evolve
into full-scale genetic engineering. Few understood what that would
mean.
Today, Fred has retired, and Frank, 50, is running
the farm. I have a vivid memory of when I last saw Frank, sitting
with him in a cramped tractor cab listening to the Rolling Stones'
Exile on Main Street at full volume as we churned fertilizer into
the soil. Now, on a sweltering July day, we're rumbling along the
dirt road past those same fields, past acre upon acre of corn plants
of identical height, a perfect crop. Frank points out the window
of his pickup to a field of seed corn almost five feet high. In
addition to his fields of Bt feed corn, he is growing experimental
seed for Monsanto, the nation's largest producer of genetically
engineered crops. "They're wanting to see how it will do maybe
one last time before putting it out in large acreage," he says.
Growing the experimental seed pays a premium and insulates him from
the rollicking prices of commodity feed corn, enabling him to make
a comfortable living from farming--an increasing rarity for American
family farmers.
Frank, like many American family farmers, is
struggling to keep the farm afloat in an era when hundreds of farms
a month are thrown into bankruptcy by the twin forces of low commodity
prices and the rising cost of inputs, like seed and agricultural
chemicals. He needs to obtain an ever-rising production from his
1,400 acres just to stay alive as a farmer. Through careful tailoring,
the new crops shrink, by at least a bit, the immense workload involved
in running a family farm, and add, at least a bit, to the reliability
of being able to make a livelihood off the land.
But like most farmers, he is now deeply dependent
on the multinational agribusiness enterprises that dominate the
US food production system. To grow transgenic seeds, Frank has to
agree to Monsanto's conditions. Every year Frank signs a contract
with Monsanto for its patented Bt corn and Roundup Ready soy, agreeing
not to replant it the following season--which means Monsanto gets
to resell it to him the following year. Frank sees himself as entrenched
on the conveyor belt of American industrial agriculture. "My
job," he says, "is the production end of this assembly
line. We're just a small little cog in the wheel.... What we're
concerned with is production agriculture. To most of us that means
our five or ten miles that we were born and raised and will probably
die in."
But whether he likes to think about it or not,
Frank's fate is entwined with that of Olga Maldonado and other farmers
like her. Indeed, it's even possible, among infinite possibilities,
that Frank is growing the same type of corn that surfaced in Capulalpan.
Ultimately, it is questions of control and predictability that lie
at the heart of the controversy over genetically modified crops.
In the farmer's fields, it is a question of control over corn's
free-floating means of insemination--those tassels you see feathering
the air in corn country are like a plant's version of a peacock's
tail, there to produce and release "male" pollen to be
carried to the "female" silks. And inside the corn plant
itself is the issue of whether genetic manipulations might have
unforeseen effects. These are questions that bedevil even the scientists
who are engineering the changes.
Some twenty miles from Frank McLain's farm, in
Ames, the Iowa State University campus spreads out amid leafy oak
trees and pleasant, low-slung buildings. The university hosts one
of the nation's leading plant-science research institutions for
agricultural biotechnology.
Dr. Mike Lee, a plant biologist, is in the agronomy
department's plant-transformation center doing genetic engineering.
Lee is at work on a research project to increase the nutritional
value of corn by inserting the most nutritious part of a hog--the
gene for hog's milk--into a corn embryo. A lab technician has inserted
a petri dish of corn embryos onto the lower shelf of what Lee calls
"the gene gun"--a critical tool of today's genetic engineers,
actually a rectangular box made from thick plastic. On the top shelf
the technician places a petri dish containing genetic information
from a female hog's milk onto a thin layer of gold pellets--which
serve as the "bullets." She flicks a switch, and as a
meter measuring air pressure per square inch marches quickly upward,
there's a notable "pop": The bullet is fired. Lee explains:
"You just accelerate those particles inside
that chamber at a very high speed. High enough so that it can crash
through the cell walls, get into the nucleus and then somehow, by
a process that is not completely understood, the DNA that's coating
those gold particles gets integrated into the corn chromosomes.
They'll start to form roots and shoots and a new plant emerges,
hopefully a plant that carries those genes now in their chromosomes."
This is genetic engineering in action, mixing the genetic material
from two organisms that would never ordinarily mix in nature. It's
been done with flounder genes in strawberries, mice genes in potatoes,
cow genes in sugarcane and soy, chicken genes in corn. And now,
as Lee explains, he hopes to increase the nutritional value of corn
with genes from hog's milk.
For Mike Lee, like many other scientists, this
technology has huge potential to increase yields, make food more
nutritious, and develop new varieties of crops that are better adapted
to climatic and pest conditions that threaten food production. "That's
why I got into this business," Lee says, "to create new
versions of existing plant species that are just a little bit more
beneficial to the needs and wants of society."
Lee has a scientist's natural curiosity and excitement
about the new technology, but he is also willing to acknowledge
that considerable uncertainties accompany it. "We're not just
changing carburetors on cars or parts on a machine," he says.
"When you introduce a new DNA sequence into a chromosome it
has a new function for the plant. Well, that function doesn't operate
in a vacuum. It operates in the context of a complex organism growing
in a complex dynamic environment."
It is those uncertainties that provoke ire among
critics, aghast at the hubris of genetic manipulation. More to the
point, perhaps, is the fact that people like Mike Lee are not the
ones driving the development of this technology. Public universities
are significantly outgunned in resources by private research labs,
which are looking, increasingly, for blockbuster products to be
used where they have the biggest markets; even the gene gun used
by Dr. Lee is available through an annual leasing arrangement from
DuPont, which owns the patent on the technology. Lee's public-spirited
ambitions for the technology, and his willingness to entertain doubts
while forging ahead with his research in the controlled environment
of a publicly funded laboratory, are an anomaly in an arena dominated
by a handful of corporations.
The reality is that agricultural biotechnology
has little to do with idealism, and far more with the financial
imperatives of the biotechnology industry. "If you ask why
these are the technologies that are on the market," says Dr.
Chuck Benbrook, former executive director of the Board on Agriculture
of the National Academy of Sciences, "the reason is that the
companies that had invested so heavily in the technology and in
buying up the seed industry had to have product on the market."
Monsanto alone poured at least a billion dollars
into biotech research, according to NPR technology correspondent
Daniel Charles in his book Lords of the Harvest, "before it
had a single genetically engineered plant to sell." Other companies--DuPont,
Dow, Aventis and Syngenta--spent billions more on research and on
a seed-company buying spree that lasted well into the 1990s. The
stakes for these companies are huge.
Few studies assessing the long-term impact of
genetically engineered products on the environment or human health
were conducted before they were rushed into mass production. As
Benbrook explains, "Promoters of the technology and certainly
the federal government in the early 1990s embraced biotechnology
so enthusiastically that there was just no patience, no interest
in, no serious investigation of those potential problems. It was
sort of a don't look, don't see policy. As a result, there really
was no serious science done in the United States for most of the
1990s on the potential risks of biotechnology."
Those risks, as documented by scientists writing
in the American Journal of Botany and the International Journal
of Food Science and Technology, and at the Weed Science Society
of America, the British Environment Ministry and the Pasteur Institute
in Paris, include the emergence of potential allergens that could
trigger reactions in humans; the rising resistance rates of pests
to the Bt toxin; the persistence of Bt toxins in sediment, threatening
nontarget insect populations; lingering residues from Roundup Ready
herbicides left behind in the soil, which could injure subsequent
seasons of crops; and the crossing of new genes into wild relatives.
Unintended environmental consequences are surfacing around the world.
In Canada, Bt toxins produced by Bt corn were discovered in the
sediment of the St. Lawrence River--which could potentially affect
the river soil and marine life. In Switzerland a scientist demonstrated
that in Bt corn the "lignin" content--the material that
keeps the stalk erect--is tougher than in non-GE varieties, a physiological
change with as-yet-unknown consequences. According to an assessment
by the US Department of Agriculture's own Economic Research Service
last spring, yields from GE crops are no higher than yields from
conventional crops, and are already starting to decline--largely
because of the extra energy it takes the plant to produce its own
insecticide.
Even the industry's spokesman in Washington,
Dr. Mike Phillips, executive director of the food and agriculture
department of the industry trade group BIO, concedes that industry
studies have only followed the trajectory of impact of genetically
engineered organisms "for eight or nine generations."
That's not a lot of time in evolutionary terms. But once a transgenic
crop is introduced, the evolutionary dynamics of living organisms
insure that ripple effects will continue for hundreds of years--in
fact, they're virtually unstoppable once loose in the environment.
Ten years ago the government's position toward
the new technology was expressed by then-Vice President Dan Quayle,
who declared that no new "unnecessary regulation" was
needed to oversee the genetic engineering of food crops. Genetically
engineered crops were, as was later enunciated by USDA policy, not
"significantly different" from previously existing means
of breeding new types of plants. That principle has provided the
foundation of the government's position ever since.
The result has been inattention to potential
risks and sporadic regulation by the government. The USDA apportioned
just $1.6 million out of a $250 million budget for all biotech-related
programs to inquire into risk assessment. (By statute, just 1 percent
of the total USDA research budget on agricultural biotechnology
is allocated to risk assessments. Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich
fought the biotech industry last spring and succeeded in raising
that figure to 2 percent, which will double the budget for USDA
risk assessments next year.)
The USDA issues use permits for experimental
trials of new genetic varieties of crops, but once they enter commercial
production, the agency has no mandate to oversee them. For ten years,
the FDA has engaged in what it calls "voluntary safety consultations"
with biotech companies, reviewing safety data supplied by the companies;
not once over the past ten years has it refused to permit development
of new GE crop varieties to move forward.
The Environmental Protection Agency has responsibility
for any new variety producing its own insecticide--which the Bt
gene does for corn, cotton and potatoes. But it relies on the companies
to submit studies as to the potential for environmental harm; nor
is it required by law to do follow-up inspections or independent
monitoring. In August of last year, top officials from each of the
EPA's ten regional offices sent an internal memorandum to their
superiors in Washington expressing concern about the agency's lack
of regulatory authority. A year later the agency still has no rules
supporting long-term monitoring of these crops in the field. According
to the EPA website, twenty "Experimental or Conditional Use"
permits were granted for trial runs of new varieties of Bt corn
between November 1998 and June 2002. Not one had been inspected
until this past August, when officials from the EPA's Region IX
office decided to pay a visit to two experimental plots of Bt corn
being grown by Dow Chemical's Mycogen seed division and DuPont's
seed subsidiary Pioneer in Hawaii. Both were found to be in violation,
and on August 5 were cited for defying requirements intended to
protect surrounding fields from the drift of genetically altered
pollen from its experimental plots.
Michael Hanson, who follows genetic engineering
for the Consumers Union, says that while there are abundant regulations
governing the technology on paper, in reality "the lack of
legal authority to pursue independent investigations, to do follow-up
on producer assertions or to conduct independent assessments of
safety claims means that in practice, the biotech industry has been
given a free ride."
Lax regulation, however, is only part of the
story. The industry received its most important historical spur
from Congress, which passed the Plant Variety Protection Act in
1980, giving patentlike, proprietary protection to the developers
of new plant varieties. These protections made the seed industry
an attractive investment for chemical and pharmaceutical companies.
And genetic engineering made patent protection far simpler to enforce;
by inserting genetic "markers" alongside the new genes,
the proprietary genes inside the plant become clearly identifiable.
If Frank McLain, for example, were to defy his agreement with Monsanto
and replant the seed he purchases from them every year, the company
would be able to tell that its gene was inside his plants. Thus,
genetic engineering also serves as a sort of branding mechanism--the
brand is imprinted in the very biology of the plant--strengthening
the proprietary hold of corporate patent-holders over their creations,
and giving them an ever-tighter grip on the farmer.
A hundred miles east of the McLain farm, Laura
Krause is standing amid her fields of corn, which sway with a refreshing
summer breeze. Krause is one of Iowa's 500 organic farmers. Wearing
a straw hat, with a sun-reddened face and lively eyes, Krause appears
the very icon of the American farmer from the last century. Her
farm is tiny; she farms a hundred acres of corn, broccoli, potatoes,
kale and carrots, all of them certified organic.
Krause's cornfield varies wildly, with plants
from four feet to others over six feet tall, a notable contrast
from most of the corn in Iowa, which seems to spread for miles in
tight walls of plants of identical height. Her field crackles with
insects, and birds swooping in and out to eat them. Krause bought
the farm here ten years ago, and has kept growing her home-grown
seed, a variety developed by the owner of this land a century ago,
by replanting it every year. She sells the seed to other organic
farmers.
But not this year. In February, she sent her
seed to a local lab for routine tests: Because she's certified organic,
her customers want to know if there are transgenes in her corn.
And sure enough, she discovered that genetically modified genes
were in there. The test didn't tell her which variety they were,
but she says they were most likely from Yield Guard, Monsanto's
variety of Bt corn, which is widely grown in her area of Iowa. She
lost her certification, and the price she received for her corn
dropped by half--from $3.50 a bushel to $1.75 a bushel.
Now, like Olga Maldonado in Oaxaca, Laura Krause
has transgenes in her corn whether she wants them or not. "There's
no way for me to go into that field and look for the plants that
contain the transgenes and deselect them," Krause says. "There's
no way for me to sort them out, because they all look exactly alike.
I can't get my business back, because I don't have any way to remove
this gene from this [corn] population."
How did it get there? Corn pollen containing
the transgene could have come from the local combine operator, who
is supposed to clean out his machinery before visiting organic farms,
or--most likely, she thinks--it came from pollen that blew in from
a neighbor's field. All it takes is a handful of loose pollen to
land on one of her silks, and transgenes enter the genetic mix.
But Krause does not want to sue her neighbor.
Besides, corn pollen is known to travel as far as six miles by the
wind, so it could have come from anywhere within striking distance
in this corn-filled corner of the state. And there is as yet no
legal precedent establishing liability for the financial damage
caused by genetically engineered crops. Ron Rosmann, president of
the board of the Organic Farming Research Foundation, whose own
cornfields in southern Iowa were contaminated with Bt genes, says
that cases like Krause's are only going to increase "as they
release more and more genetically engineered seeds.... What we're
unfortunately coming to is that zero contamination for corn is impossible."
Organic farmers in Nebraska, Minnesota and elsewhere in Iowa, Rosmann
says, have also experienced contamination similar to that on Laura
Krause's farm.
Companies retain the legal right to enforce their
patent-holder prerogatives over unlicensed use of their seed. And
if their pollen happens to escape and fertilize crops in another
field such as Krause's, there is no legal means for farmers to enforce
the purity of their own varieties. Laura Krause, and thousands of
farmers like her, are finding themselves in a legal black hole.
In response, a group of farmers in Iowa has crafted
a state bill that would establish an indemnity fund to be paid out
in instances of GE contamination with the hope that the bill will
be introduced in this coming legislative session. In Congress, Kucinich
has introduced a bill that would establish firm lines of liability
for the companies that produce the "contaminating" seed,
but at this stage it has little chance of passing. And next month,
state residents in Oregon will be voting on an initiative that would
require labeling of all foods containing GE ingredients.
As for Mexico, the biotech industry itself no
longer even disputes Chapela's assertions that transgenic corn made
its way over that "ironclad wall" into Oaxaca. Rather,
according to Dr. Phillips of BIO, the fact that GE crops are in
Mexico's soil now, despite the government planting ban, should be
an invitation to let more in. "If you're the government of
Mexico," he says, "hopefully you've learned a lesson here
and that is that it's very difficult to keep a new technology from
entering your borders, particularly in a biological system.... It
really is incumbent upon the Mexican government to step up the process
and get their regulatory system in place so that [they] can begin
accepting these products and give farmers the opportunity to choose."
American farmers, both those growing organic
and non-GMO conventional corn, have paid a heavy price for the porousness
of that "biological system." The American Corn Growers
Association, representing corn producers in twenty-eight states,
estimates that US corn farmers have lost more than $814 million
in foreign sales over the past five years as a result of restrictions
on genetically modified food imports imposed by Europe, Japan and
other world buyers. That enormous figure doesn't even account for
the depressed prices farmers now receive for their corn as a result
of an oversupply (of unexported corn) on the domestic market--with
a deleterious effect on farmers' livelihood that the recent farm
bill attempts to address with up to $20 billion in subsidies. For
every American taxpayer, that amounts to a personal subsidy to the
agricultural biotech industry.
Defying evolution by customizing traits that
would never appear in nature holds out the dream of new markets--and
premium prices--in the evergreen enterprise of food production.
But the dream, even according to the USDA's own assessments, is
turning sour. While promoting agricultural biotechnology with one
hand, the department's Economic Research Service is reporting, with
the other, that not only are yields not coming anywhere near expectations,
but that genetically engineered corn and soybeans have not meant
an overall improvement in the financial status of farmers.
Still, the horizons of agricultural biotechnology
continue to expand. I am driving in a van with Dr. Kan Wang, an
agronomist at Iowa State University in Ames. We turn off a country
lane onto a dirt road and into the woods. A student of Dr. Wang's
unlocks a gate, and we continue driving on the dirt road through
the woods until we reach an extraordinary sight: a tiny cornfield,
set amid a large soybean field, in the middle of the woods. This
is where the next generation of genetic engineering is unfolding:
Dr. Wang is conducting research into the development of vaccines
in corn.
In the field a hundred or so corn plants are
surrounded by an electric fence. Each tassel is capped by a brown
paper bag, what Wang jokingly refers to as a "corn condom."
I am here to witness corn sex, or, really, safe sex for corn. The
reason? Wang is experimenting with a vaccine in this corn that will
prevent diarrhea in baby pigs: When pigs eat the corn, she wants
them to be immunized against a disease that is costing hog farmers
millions of dollars in losses each year. And they don't want the
corn pollen flowing anywhere they don't want it to go; nor do they
want any outside pollen fertilizing these special plants. Thus the
corn condoms. Right now, Wang is testing the corn to insure that
it's not also developing potential allergens for the pigs. And if
it works for pigs, says Wang, "it could work for humans too."
This is the future of agricultural biotechnology.
One might have some measure of confidence with the prospect of corn
vaccines in the hands of Dr. Wang, the only scientist in the country
working exclusively with public funding to explore the possibilities--and
risks--of breeding medicines into corn. She has taken extreme precautions
with this field: It is miles away from any neighboring corn, and
is surrounded by soybeans and woods, with which corn has no chance
of cross-pollinating.
But Dr. Ellstrand, the plant geneticist, fears
what might happen when the pharmaceutical industry, which is now
testing corn as a vehicle for antibiotics and vaccines, starts putting
such medicines into mass production. "Corn produces a lot of
pollen," he says. "And once there's a little bit of contamination,
there's the potential for releasing pharmaceutical corn genes into
food crops."
Thus far, the record has not been reassuring.
Farmers like Laura Krause and Olga Maldonado have already, through
the various routes that a living organism may travel, been the recipients
of unwanted transgenes propelled beyond the barriers of control.
Standing in his Berkeley, California, greenhouse,
Ignacio Chapela, the scientist who ignited the controversy in Mexico,
comments: "The genie is out of the bottle. What we are confronted
with now is just thousands of very different genies that are still
in their bottles, and the question is this: Do we want to keep those
bottles closed or are we opening them?"
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