Pesticide and Environmental Update The
Bugs that are Eating Monsanto By
Tom Laskawy
Now that 94 percent of the soy and 70
percent of the corn grown in the U.S. are genetically modified, Monsanto
-- one of the companies that dominates the GMO seed market -- might look
to some like it's winning. But if we look a little closer, I'd say they're
holding on by a thread.
Their current success is due in large part
to brilliant marketing. The company's approach was both compelling --
their products were sold as the key to making large-scale farming far
simpler and more predictable -- and aggressive: Monsanto made it virtually
impossible for most farmers to find conventional seeds for sale in most
parts of the country.
Despite promises of improved productivity,
enhanced nutritional content, or extreme weather tolerance -- none of
which has ever come to market -- Monsanto has only ever produced seeds
with two genetically modified traits: either herbicide tolerance or
pesticide production. And even those traits never lived up to the
marketing hype.
But it now appears that the core traits
themselves are failing. Over the last several years, so-called "superweeds"
have grown resistant to the herbicide RoundUp, the companion product
that's made Monsanto's herbicide-tolerant (aka RoundUp-Ready) corn, soy,
and alfalfa so popular. Those crops were supposed to be the only plants
that could withstand being sprayed by the chemical. Oops.
The superweed problem is so bad that
farmers in some parts of the country are abandoning thousands of acres
because the weeds are so out of control, or dousing the crops with ever
more toxic (and expensive) combinations of other herbicides. Thankfully,
it's an issue that's getting more and more media attention.
And now Monsanto's other flagship product
line, the pesticide-producing "Bt crops," named for the
pesticide they are genetically modified to emit, is in trouble.
Scientists have warned that insects would
become resistant from the overuse of Bt crops, but Monsanto poo-pooed it.
Even so, when the EPA first considered Bt crops for approval, agency
scientists wanted a 50-percent buffer to prevent resistance (only half the
acreage in any given field could be planted with Bt crops). Of course, if
that demand stood, there is no way that Monsanto would ever have achieved
their current market dominance.
Monsanto was so convinced (publicly at
least) of their products' immunity from, well, an immunity problem, that
they pushed back hard and got the buffer zone reduced to 20 percent. The
idea with a larger buffer was that any resistant bugs that arose would
breed with the bugs feeding on the non-Bt crops nearby, and ecological
balance would be preserved. So, by requiring a small buffer, EPA
higher-ups were echoing Monsanto's party line: Resistance isn't a risk.
Sadly, even that 20-percent rule has been
ignored by many farmers, with no fear of retribution from Monsanto for
violating safety protocols, of course. After all, the smaller the buffer,
the more of their profit-earning GMO seeds farmers were planting.
Yet it's possible that the EPA is starting
to push back against Monsanto's handling of its Bt crops a little. In a
new report [PDF] -- unpublicized and buried deep in a government website
-- and analyzed in detail over at Mother Jones, the EPA confirms many
anti-GMO activists' deepest fears. The report "officially" found
evidence that corn rootworms, a major pest for corngrowers, have grown
resistant to Bt in several states; even worse, that resistance is strong
enough that EPA scientists are insisting the company implement a
"remedial action plan." In addition, the report criticizes
Monsanto for missing the rise of the rootworm resistance problem via its
faulty monitoring system.
However, Tom Philpott at Mother Jones
picks out the report's key eyebrow-raiser:
Perhaps most devastatingly of all, EPA
reveals that Monsanto has been receiving reports of possible resistance
since 2004 -- the year after the product's release -- when it got 21 such
complaints nationwide. The number of reports ballooned to 94 in 2006 and
has been hovering at around 100 per year since. And guess what?
"Monsanto reported that none of their follow-up investigations
resulted ... in finding resistant populations [of rootworms]."
Naturally, Monsanto continues to deny the
problem. In a recent blog post on its website responding to the EPA
report, Monsanto again rewrote reality, claiming: "Scientific
confirmation of corn rootworm resistance ... has not been
demonstrated."
Of course, this peer-reviewed study, which
provided just such confirmation, doesn't count because ... because
Monsanto said so. So there.
Monsanto's denial of reality in favor of
its bottom line, while a practice now commonplace in corporate America,
will have repercussions beyond industrial agriculture. Bt is also a key
pesticide for organic agriculture; if resistance spreads, it's possible
that Bt will lose its effectiveness for organic farmers as well. We're
still far from that, thankfully.
Interestingly, this story has mainly been
picked up by the business press concerned with the effect of this latest
development on Monsanto's stock price. Perhaps we should take the warning
of stock traders as a good indicator that Monsanto may really be in
trouble.
There is an obvious immediate solution
here: Require farmers to plant larger buffers. It's not at all clear that
the EPA is prepared to go beyond posting a critical report on an obscure
government website -- but if they were, it would have the immediate effect
of reducing the amount of Bt corn and soy farmers are growing. And that
wouldn't just be good for the bugs.
A 17-year veteran of both traditional and
online media, Tom is a founder and Executive Director of the Food &
Environment Reporting Network and a Contributing Writer at Grist covering
food and agricultural policy. Tom's long and winding road to food politics
writing passed through New York, Boston, the San Francisco Bay Area,
Florence, Italy and Philadelphia (which has a vibrant progressive food
politics and sustainable agriculture scene, thank you very much). In
addition to Grist, his writing has appeared online in the American
Prospect, Slate, the New York Times and The New Republic. He is on record
as believing that wrecking the planet is a bad idea.
|