On a fenced plot not far from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home, a
field of mustard is in full yellow bloom, representing his government's
reversal of an effective ban on field trials of genetically modified (GM) food crops.
The
GM mustard planted in the half-acre field in the grounds of the Indian
Agricultural Research Institute in New Delhi is in the final stage of
trials before the variety is allowed to be sold commercially, and that
could come within two years, scientists associated with the project say.
India placed a moratorium on GM aubergine in 2010 fearing the effect on food safety
and biodiversity. Field trials of other GM crops were not formally
halted, but the regulatory system was brought to a deadlock.
But
allowing GM crops is critical to Modi's goal of boosting dismal farm
productivity in India, where urbanisation is devouring arable land and
population growth will mean there are 1.5 billion mouths to feed by 2030
- more even than China.
Starting in August last year, his government resumed the field trials for selected crops with little publicity.
"Field trials are already on
because our mandate is to find out a scientific review, a scientific
evaluation," Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar told Reuters last
week. "Confined, safe field trials are on. It's a long process to find
out whether it is fully safe or not."
Modi was a supporter of GM
crops when he was chief minister of Gujarat state over a decade ago, the
time when GM cotton was introduced in the country and became a huge
success. Launched in 2002, Bt cotton, which produces its own pesticide,
is the country's only GM crop and covers 95 per cent of India's cotton
cultivation of 11.6 million hectares (28.7 million acres).
From being a net importer, India has become the world's second-largest producer and exporter of the fibre.
However,
grassroots groups associated with Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) have opposed GM crops because of the reliance on
seeds patented by multinationals. The Swadeshi Jagran Manch, a
nationalist group which promotes self-reliance, has vowed to hold
protests if GM food crops are made commercially available.
"There
is no scientific evidence that GM enhances productivity," said Pradeep, a
spokesman for the group. "And in any case, why should we hand over our
agriculture to some foreign companies?"
A handful of agrichemical
and seeds companies dominate the global market for GM crops, including
Monsanto Co., DuPont Pioneer, a unit of DuPont, Dow AgroSciences, a unit
of Dow Chemical, and Syngenta.
SECOND GREEN REVOLUTION
Largely
agricultural India became self-sufficient in foodgrains after the
launch of the Green Revolution in the 1960s, when it introduced
high-yielding seed varieties and the use of fertiliser and irrigation.
The challenge now is to replicate that success in edible oils and vegetables, which are increasingly in demand.
India
imports about 60 per cent of its edible oil needs at an annual cost of
up to $10 billion - its third-biggest import item after crude oil and
gold.
The trials of the mustard plant, which provides the highest
yield of all oilseeds, are being led by Delhi University researchers
headed by Deepak Pental, a scientist who returned to India in 1985 from
Britain. He has said that he has developed a transgenic mustard strain
that raises output by up to 30 per cent but that further trials were
halted after the moratorium.
The environment ministry began
approving GM field trials in August, although applicants need to seek
no-objection certificates from states where the trials are to be
conducted.
States ruled by the BJP are spearheading the trials:
Last month, Maharashtra gave the all-clear to open field trials of rice,
chickpeas, corn and aubergine, as well as new varieties of cotton.
Punjab,
ruled jointly by the BJP and a local party, gave the go-ahead for
mustard in October followed next month by Delhi, then indirectly run by
the federal government in the absence of a local government.
"The
(federal) government is, for a change, being decisive," Pental said,
adding his mustard strain could be ready to be released for commercial
farming in a year or two.
Environmental group Greenpeace however remains opposed.
"The
current government's rush with open field trials without addressing the
fundamental loopholes in the regulatory mechanism is a matter for
serious concern," said Manvendra Singh Inaniya, a campaigner for
Greenpeace India.
"This leaves us vulnerable to contamination with
untested and potentially hazardous GM food. We urge the Union
Government to roll back approvals given to open air field trials of GM
crops."
But the environment ministry official said studies have
found no ill effects from GM foods and that local firms should partner
with multinationals like Monsanto, which has already licensed its Bt
Cotton product to several Indian companies.
"Farmers are smart and
deserve wider choices," a spokesman for Monsanto in India said. "They
will only reward products, practices and partnerships which create value
on their farms."
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