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Even wheat industry leaders, who said biotechnology could lead to improved profitability for struggling wheat growers, warned Roundup Ready wheat could devastate exports of all U.S. and Canadian wheat.
Foreign buyers, including top U.S. spring wheat buyer Japan, have said they are unwilling to risk alienating their own customers by accepting biotech wheat supplies. Some said they would not buy any U.S. wheat at all if biotech wheat was approved because it might get mixed with the conventional wheat supplies.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
What this means is that a corn farmer must buy new seed corn (from a dealer) every year, but can plant his own wheat year after year. Any fool knows that what is free (even if poor quality) will be more profitable than monsanto's "uber-wheat" which you have to purchase from a licensed dealer. Every Year. At interest.
OAXACA, Mexico - If left unchecked, modified genes spread by imported U.S. biotech corn threaten to displace or contaminate native ancestor varieties in Mexico, the birthplace of corn, a NAFTA watchdog group reported Thursday.
The study by the trilateral Commission for Environmental Cooperation said gene transfers could damage Mexico's vast storehouse of native corn, whose wild ancestral genes might one day be needed to help commercial crops overcome diseases or adverse conditions.
The report, presented at a corn symposium in the colonial city of Oaxaca, is still in draft form and must be approved during a commission meeting in June.
It does not provide data on the prevalence of genetically modified corn in the Mexican countryside, but Amanda Galvez, head of the Mexican government's interagency group on biosafety and genetically modified organisms, said a federally sponsored study had confirmed instances of massive gene transfer.
Genetically modified crops could form part of the answer to world hunger, according to a United Nations report.
With the world population set to rise by two billion over the next 30 years, such crops could help meet food needs.
Drought and insect-resistant crops could boost yields and incomes, the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) says.
But it warns that biotechnology is no panacea and must focus on the needs of developing countries.
Global attitudes
The report comes days after the decision by US agri-chemical company Monsanto to stop marketing modified wheat because of consumer opposition.
Commercial resistance to a strain of wheat called Roundup Ready has been so strong the company has decided to shelve its original plans.
But the UN report suggests that although many Europeans are opposed to the idea of GM food on their plates, many in the developing world are not.
It cites a survey in which the majority of those questioned in India, Colombia and Nigeria believed the benefits of biotechnology outweighed its risks.