|
Why
Genetically Modfied Crops can Devastate Health
Originally published
on http://www.mercola.com/2003/jul/2/gm_crops.htm
1.
GM crops failed to deliver promised benefits
The
consistent finding from independent research and on-farm surveys
since 1999 is that GM crops have failed to deliver the promised
benefits of significantly increasing yields or reducing herbicide
and pesticide use. GM crops have
cost the
United States
an estimated $12 billion in farm subsidies, lost sales and product
recalls due to transgenic contamination. Massive failures
in Bt cotton of up to 100 percent were reported in
India
.
Biotech
corporations have suffered rapid decline since 2000, and investment
advisors forecast no future for the agricultural sector. Meanwhile
worldwide resistance to GM has reached a climax in 2002 when
Zambia
refused GM maize in food aid despite the threat of famine.
2.
GM crops posing escalating problems on the farm
The
instability of transgenic lines has plagued the industry from the
beginning, and this may be responsible for a string of major crop
failures. A review in 1994 stated, "While there are some
examples of plants which show stable expression of a transgene these
may prove to be the exceptions to the rule. In an informal survey of
over 30 companies involved in the commercialization of transgenic
crop plants ... almost all of the respondents indicated that they
had observed some level of transgene inaction. Many respondents
indicated that most cases of transgene inactivation never reach the
literature."
Triple
herbicide-tolerant oilseed rape volunteers that have combined
transgenic and non-transgenic traits are now widespread in
Canada
. Similar multiple herbicide-tolerant volunteers and weeds have
emerged in the
United States
. In the
United States
, glyphosate-tolerant weeds are plaguing GM cotton and soya fields,
and atrazine, one of the most toxic herbicides, has had to be used
with glufosinate-tolerant GM maize.
Bt
biopesticide traits are simultaneously threatening to create
superweeds and Bt- resistant pests.
3.
Extensive transgenic contamination unavoidable
Extensive
transgenic contamination has occurred in maize landraces growing in
remote regions in
Mexico
despite an official moratorium that has been in place since 1998.
High levels of contamination have since been found in
Canada
. In a test of 33 certified seed stocks, 32 were found contaminated.
New
research shows that transgenic pollen, wind-blown and deposited
elsewhere, or fallen directly to the ground, is a major source of
transgenic contamination. Contamination is generally acknowledged to
be unavoidable, hence there can be no co-existence of transgenic and
non-transgenic crops.
4.
GM crops not safe
Contrary
to the claims of proponents, GM crops have not been proven safe. The
regulatory framework was fatally flawed from the start. It was based
on an anti-precautionary approach designed to expedite product
approval at the expense of safety considerations. The principle of
'substantial equivalence', on which risk assessment is based, is
intended to be vague and ill-defined, thereby giving companies
complete license in claiming transgenic products 'substantially
equivalent' to non-transgenic products, and hence 'safe.'
5.
GM food raises serious safety concerns
There
have been very few credible studies on GM food safety. Nevertheless,
the available findings already give cause for concern. In the still
only systematic investigation on GM food ever carried out in the
world, 'growth factor-like' effects were found in the stomach and
small intestine of young rats that were not fully accounted for by
the transgene product, and were hence attributable to the transgenic
process or the transgenic construct, and may hence be general to all
GM food. There have been at least two other, more limited, studies
that also raised serious safety concerns.
6.
Dangerous gene products are incorporated into crops
Bt
proteins, incorporated into 25 percent of all transgenic crops
worldwide, have been found harmful to a range of non-target insects.
Some of them are also potent immunogens and allergens. A team of
scientists have cautioned against releasing Bt crops for human use.
Food
crops are increasingly used to produce pharmaceuticals and drugs,
including cytokines known to suppress the immune system, induce
sickness and central nervous system toxicity; interferon alpha,
reported to cause dementia, neurotoxicity and mood and cognitive
side effects; vaccines; and viral sequences such as the 'spike'
protein gene of the pig coronavirus, in the same family as the SARS
virus linked to the current epidemic. The glycoprotein gene gp120 of
the AIDS virus HIV-1, incorporated into GM maize as a 'cheap, edible
oral vaccine', serves as yet another biological time-bomb, as it can
interfere with the immune system and recombine with viruses and
bacteria to generate new and unpredictable pathogens.
7.
Terminator crops spread male sterility
Crops
engineered with 'suicide' genes for male sterility have been
promoted as a means of 'containing', i.e. preventing, the spread of
transgenes. In reality, the hybrid crops sold to farmers spread both
male sterile suicide genes as well herbicide tolerance genes via
pollen.
8.
Broad-spectrum herbicides highly toxic to humans and other species
Glufosinate
ammonium and glyphosate are used with the herbicide-tolerant
transgenic crops that currently account for 75 percent of all
transgenic crops worldwide. Both are systemic metabolic poisons
expected to have a wide range of harmful effects, and these have
been confirmed.
Glufosinate
ammonium is linked to neurological, respiratory, gastrointestinal
and hematological toxicities, and birth defects in humans and
mammals. It is toxic to butterflies and a number of beneficial
insects, also to the larvae of clams and oysters, Daphnia and some
freshwater fish, especially the rainbow trout. It inhibits
beneficial soil bacteria and fungi, especially those that fix
nitrogen.
Glyphosate
is the most frequent cause of complaints and poisoning in the
UK
. Disturbances of many body functions have been reported after
exposures at normal use levels.
Glyphosate
exposure nearly doubled the risk of late spontaneous abortion, and
children born to users of glyphosate had elevated neurobehavioral
defects. Glyphosate caused retarded development of the foetal
skeleton in laboratory rats. Glyphosate inhibits the synthesis of
steroids, and is genotoxic in mammals, fish and frogs. Field dose
exposure of earthworms caused at least 50 percent mortality and
significant intestinal damage among surviving worms. Roundup caused
cell division dysfunction that may be linked to human cancers.
The
known effects of both glufosinate and glyphosate are sufficiently
serious for all further uses of the herbicides to be halted.
9.
Genetic engineering creates super-viruses
By
far the most insidious dangers of genetic engineering are inherent
to the process itself, which greatly enhances the scope and
probability of horizontal gene transfer and recombination, the main
route to creating viruses and bacteria that cause disease epidemics.
This was highlighted in 2001 by the 'accidental' creation of a
killer mouse virus in the course of an apparently innocent genetic
engineering experiment.
Newer
techniques, such as DNA shuffling are allowing geneticists to create
in a matter of minutes in the laboratory millions of recombinant
viruses that have never existed in billions of years of evolution.
Disease-causing viruses and bacteria and their genetic material are
the predominant materials and tools for genetic engineering, as much
as for the intentional creation of bio-weapons.
10.
Transgenic DNA in food taken up by bacteria in human gut
There
is already experimental evidence that transgenic DNA from plants has
been taken up by bacteria in the soil and in the gut of human
volunteers. Antibiotic resistance marker genes can spread from
transgenic food to pathogenic bacteria, making infections very
difficult to treat.
11.
Transgenic DNA and cancer
Transgenic
DNA is known to survive digestion in the gut and to jump into the
genome of mammalian cells, raising the possibility for triggering
cancer.
The
possibility cannot be excluded that feeding GM products such as
maize to animals also carries risks, not just for the animals but
also for human beings consuming the animal products.
12.
CaMV 35S promoter increases horizontal gene transfer
Evidence
suggests that transgenic constructs with the CaMV 35S promoter might
be especially unstable and prone to horizontal gene transfer and
recombination, with all the attendant hazards: gene mutations due to
random insertion, cancer, reactivation of dormant viruses and
generation of new viruses. This promoter is present in most GM crops
being grown commercially today.
13.
A history of misrepresentation and suppression of scientific
evidence
There
has been a history of misrepresentation and suppression of
scientific evidence, especially on horizontal gene transfer. Key
experiments failed to be performed, or were performed badly and then
misrepresented. Many experiments were not followed up, including
investigations on whether the CaMV 35S promoter is responsible for
the 'growth-factor-like' effects observed in young rats fed GM
potatoes.
In
conclusion, GM crops have failed to deliver the promised benefits
and are posing escalating problems on the farm. Transgenic
contamination is now widely acknowledged to be unavoidable, and
hence there can be no co-existence of GM and non-GM agriculture.
Most important of all, GM crops have not been proven safe. On the
contrary, sufficient evidence has emerged to raise serious safety
concerns, that if ignored could result in irreversible damage to
health and the environment. GM crops should be firmly rejected now.
Why
Sustainable Agriculture?
1.
Higher productivity and yields, especially in the
Third World
Some
8.98 million farmers have adopted sustainable agriculture practices
on 28.92 million hectares in Asia, Latin America and
Africa
. Reliable data from 89 projects show higher productivity and
yields: 50 percent to 100 percent increase in yield for rain-fed
crops, and five percent to 10 percent for irrigated crops. Top
successes include Burkina Faso, which turned a cereal deficit of 644
kg per year to an annual surplus of 153 kg; Ethiopia, where 12,500
households enjoyed a 60 percent increase in crop yields; and
Honduras and Guatemala, where 45,000 families increased yields from
400 to 600 kg/ha to 2,000 to 2,500 kg/ha.
Long-term
studies in industrialized countries show yields for organic
comparable to conventional agriculture, and sometimes higher.
2.
Better soils
Sustainable
agricultural practices tend to reduce soil erosion, as well as
improve soil physical structure and water-holding capacity, which
are crucial in averting crop failures during periods of drought.
Soil
fertility is maintained or increased by various sustainable
agriculture practices. Studies show that soil organic matter and
nitrogen levels are higher in organic than in conventional fields.
Biological
activity has also been found to be higher in organic soils. There
are more earthworms, arthropods, mycorrhizal and other fungi, and
microorganisms, all of which are beneficial for nutrient recycling
and suppression of disease.
3.
Cleaner environment
There
is little or no polluting chemical-input with sustainable
agriculture. Moreover, research suggests that less nitrate and
phosphorus are leached to groundwater from organic soils.
Better
water infiltration rates are found in organic systems. Therefore,
they are less prone to erosion and less likely to contribute to
water pollution from surface runoff.
4.
Reduced pesticides and no increase in pests
Organic
farming prohibits routine pesticide application. Integrated pest
management has cut the number of pesticide sprays in
Vietnam
from 3.4 to one per season, in
Sri Lanka
from 2.9 to 0.5 per season, and in
Indonesia
from 2.9 to 1.1 per season.
Research
showed no increase in crop losses due to pest damage, despite the
withdrawal of synthetic insecticides in Californian tomato
production.
Pest
control is achievable without pesticides, reversing crop losses, as
for example, by using 'trap crops' to attract stem borer, a major
pest in
East Africa
. Other benefits of avoiding pesticides arise from utilizing the
complex inter-relationships between species in an ecosystem.
5.
Supporting biodiversity and using diversity
Sustainable
agriculture promotes agricultural biodiversity, which is crucial for
food security and rural livelihoods. Organic farming can also
support much greater biodiversity, benefiting species that have
significantly declined.
Biodiverse
systems are more productive than monocultures. Integrated farming
systems in
Cuba
are 1.45 to 2.82 times more productive than monocultures. Thousands
of Chinese rice farmers have doubled yields and nearly eliminated
the most devastating disease simply by mixed planting of two
varieties.
Soil
biodiversity is enhanced by organic practices, bringing beneficial
effects such as recovery and rehabilitation of degraded soils,
improved soil structure and water infiltration.
6.
Environmentally and economically sustainable
Research
on apple production systems ranked the organic system first in
environmental and economic sustainability, the integrated system
second and the conventional system last. Organic apples were most
profitable due to price premiums, quicker investment return and fast
recovery of costs.
A
Europe-wide study showed that organic farming performs better than
conventional farming in the majority of environmental indicators. A
review by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations (FAO) concluded that well-managed organic agriculture leads
to more favorable conditions at all environmental levels.
7.
Ameliorating climate change by reducing direct & indirect energy
use
Organic
agriculture uses energy much more efficiently and greatly reduces
CO2 emissions compared with conventional agriculture, both with
respect to direct energy consumption in fuel and oil and indirect
consumption in synthetic fertilizers and pesticides.
Sustainable
agriculture restores soil organic matter content, increasing carbon
sequestration below ground, thereby recovering an important carbon
sink. Organic systems have shown significant ability to absorb and
retain carbon, raising the possibility that sustainable agriculture
practices can help reduce the impact of global warming.
Organic
agriculture is likely to emit less nitrous dioxide (N2O), another
important greenhouse gas and also a cause of stratospheric ozone
depletion.
8.
Efficient, profitable production
Any
yield reduction in organic agriculture is more than offset by
ecological and efficiency gains. Research has shown that the organic
approach can be commercially viable in the long-term, producing more
food per unit of energy or resources.
Data
show that smaller farms produce far more per unit area than the
larger farms characteristic of conventional farming. Though the
yield per unit area of one crop may be lower on a small farm than on
a large monoculture, the total output per unit area, often composed
of more than a dozen crops and various animal products, can be far
higher.
Production
costs for organic farming are often lower than for conventional
farming, bringing equivalent or higher net returns even without
organic price premiums. When price premiums are factored in, organic
systems are almost always more profitable.
9.
Improved food security and benefits to local communities
A
review of sustainable agriculture projects in developing countries
showed that average food production per household increased by 1.71
tons per year (up 73 percent) for 4.42 million farmers on 3.58
million hectares, bringing food security and health benefits to
local communities.
Increasing
agricultural productivity has been shown to also increase food
supplies and raise incomes, thereby reducing poverty, increasing
access to food, reducing malnutrition and improving health and
livelihoods.
Sustainable
agricultural approaches draw extensively on traditional and
indigenous knowledge, and place emphasis on the farmers' experience
and innovation. This thereby utilizes appropriate, low-cost and
readily available local resources as well as improves farmers'
status and autonomy, enhancing social and cultural relations within
local communities.
10.
Better food quality for health
Organic
food is safer as organic farming prohibits routine pesticide and
herbicide use so harmful chemical residues are rarely found.
Organic
production also bans the use of artificial food additives such as
hydrogenated fats, phosphoric acid, aspartame and monosodium
glutamate, which have been linked to health problems as diverse as
heart disease, osteoporosis, migraines and hyperactivity.
Studies
have shown that, on average, organic food has higher vitamin C,
higher mineral levels and higher plant phenolics--plant compounds
that can fight cancer and heart disease, and combat age-related
neurological dysfunctions--and significantly less nitrates, a toxic
compound.
Sustainable
agricultural practices have proven beneficial in all aspects
relevant to health and the environment. In addition, they bring food
security and social and cultural well-being to local communities
everywhere. There is an urgent need for a comprehensive global shift
to all forms of sustainable agriculture.
Independent
Science Panel Report
June 15, 2003
Dr.
Mercola's Comment:
Many
respectable scientists are concerned about, and nearly all of
Europe
has strong
opposition to, genetically modified foods.
This
is a wise choice as consuming genetically modified foods is like
participating in a giant experiment. There is no telling what the
consequences of using these genetically modified foods will be
because these products have never existed before now.
It
seems clear that these altered foods are capable of producing
changes in humans. Already, investigators have found that rats fed
genetically modified potatoes had an increased thickening in the
lining of their stomach and intestine and a weakening of their
immune system.
Further,
some scientists want to put vaccines into plants without any real
knowledge of what effects this unnatural addition will have on human
health, or the health of our planet.
This
is SHEER LUNACY.
What
these scientists have failed to fully appreciate is that once these
genetically modified plants are growing it is physically impossible
to prevent them from pollinating other plants, thereby contaminating
them with these new proteins, of which we do not know the long-term
consequences.
The
absurdity of the entire process is mind-boggling. These scientists
are willing to sacrifice the country’s food supply by adding
vaccines, which do not even work in the first place, to plants.
If
this continues, our grandchildren may not have access to any
non-genetically modified food, and the health of our society may
continue to rapidly decline.
One
of the keys to health is good food. Although most of us don't choose
to do so, we can still purchase real, unaltered food in this
country. Sadly, the future does not appear to provide this option.
Genetically
modified foods did not exist prior to 1995. Ninety percent of the
money Americans spend on food is spent on processed foods, and
seventy percent of processed foods have genetically modified foods
in them.
There
have been NO STUDIES done with humans to show what happens when
genetically modified foods are consumed. The FDA has ASSUMED that
these modified foods are equivalent to the original foods and does
not require any studies to have them approved, despite the fact that
this technology has never before existed in the history of the
world.
On the other hand, sustainable
agriculture provides a method to produce healthier food that is also
better for the environment. It’s time to start looking at
long-term consequences--switching to sustainable farming methods
will preserve our
|