Twenty years ago, the first genetically modified (GM) crops were planted in
the USA, alongside dazzling promises about this new technology. Two decades on,
the promises are getting bigger and bigger, but GM crops are not delivering any
of them. Not only was this technology supposed to make food and agriculture
systems simpler, safer and more efficient, but GM crops are increasingly being
touted as the key to 'feeding the world' and 'fighting climate change'.
The promises may be growing, but the popularity of GM crops is not. Despite
twenty years of pro-GM marketing by powerful industry lobbies, GM technology has
only been taken up by a handful of countries, for a handful of crops. GM crops
are grown on only 3% of global agricultural land. Figures from the GM industry
in fact show that only five countries account for 90% of global GM cropland, and
nearly 100% of these GM crops are one of two kinds: herbicide-tolerant or
pesticide-producing. Meanwhile, whole regions of the world have resisted GM
crops. European consumers do not consume GM foods, and a single type of GM maize
is cultivated in Europe. Most of Asia is GM-free, with the GM acreage in India
and China mostly accounted for by a non-food crop: cotton. Only three countries
in Africa grow any GM crops. Put simply, GM crops are not 'feeding the
world'.
Why have GM crops failed to be the popular success the industry claims them to be?
Why have GM crops failed to be the popular success the industry claims them to be?
LINK TO THE REPORT Twenty Years of Failure
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