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GM
Foods & World Hunger
Introduction
Are
GM foods the solution to world hunger? This is the big one.
Proponents of GM foods know that if they can pull this one off,
then the money will really start to roll in. Let's look at some
of the issues involved in this topic of global significance.
The argument put forward to support the proposal that genetic
modification of food will help solve the world hunger problem
is simple: Millions of people around the world are starving.
They do not get enough to eat. By genetically modifying crops
so that more food is produced, the problem of world hunger can
be solved.
On the
surface, the above argument may seem highly convincing. More
food, less hunger. It certainly seems to ring true. And we all
want starvation to be eliminated. So what's wrong with using
gene technology to produce more food and solve the problem
Some Facts
The argument
that people are starving due to a global lack of food
production is flawed. We have enough food to feed everyone on
the planet. The reason why people go hungry is therefore not
because there is not enough food. It is because of barriers,
whether they be political, economic, or any other, that prevent
certain groups of people from being able to eat the food that
is already there. Many people go hungry, for instance, simply
because they do not have enough money to buy food. After all,
people even go hungry in North America and in Europe where there
is clearly enough food. The reasons for starvation will depend
on the circumstances of the individual e.g. illegal immigrants,
no job and no income support etc. The distribution of food on
the planet is also a major factor in relation to starvation.
Take, for instance, the example of Ethiopia, where at the height
of its famine, a significant quantity of food grown there was
actually exported to the USA.
One must
also question the intention of biotechnology companies. Are they
really spending billions of pounds and dollars on developing
and advertising GM crops in order to supply so much of it to
people who can't afford it? Since when did they take up this
charitable role? Or is each biotechnology company a business
that wants to sell its product at the best price that will give
them the maximum possible return for their investment?
Also, if
solving world hunger was the aim of biotechnology companies,
and already millions of people are eating their GM products,
then would one not expect that at least a few thousand people
had already been saved from starvation? And if they haven't then
why is that?
The reality
is that the GM products are not being supplied to the starving.
All that is essentially happening is that they are replacing
the conventional foods that were already there to begin with.
And neither is there any reduction in price. So, if you couldn't
afford or didn't have access to conventional food before, then
it is extremely unlikely that you can afford or have access to
GM food, now. The price and distribution of food has, on average,
remained unchanged. So
where exactly do GM foods end up? Much GM food actually ends
up in processed foods such as biscuits, cakes, pizzas, crisps
etc. Surely these aren't the sort of foods that we need more
of in order to solve world hunger! Also a large proportion is
fed to animals. With regards to world hunger, there are two problems
with chanelling large quantities of food into animal feed:
A) It does little to help the millions of starving people in
places like India who are actually vegetarian.
B) It is an inefficient way to feed large numbers of people.
The closer
one examines the proposal that GM companies are aiming to eradicate
world hunger, the more clear it is that they are not.
Regarding food quantity, one must even question the assumption
that genetically modification is the way to increase yields.A
1999 report from the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), after examining crops grown in a number of different
areas, refuted the claim that genetic modification results in
greater yields of crop.
.......so it actually seems, that genetic modification
may not even help us to grow more food in the first place!
It doesn't even end there. One very sinister aspect of the
technology which has been, and apparently still is being researched,
is what is known as the 'Terminator Technology'. By inserting
a set of 'Terminator genes' into the DNA of a crop, the seeds
of the following generation would be dead. The farmer would therefore
have no viable seed to plant for the following year. In many
countries the saving of seed for the following year is common
and allows the farmer to be more self-sufficient. The Terminator
technology, if applied would ensure that this will not happen.
The only way the farmer could sow any more seed would be by buying
them......and only if they can afford it.
Whenever
one examines the deeper issues related to GM food it repeatedly
becomes clear that the technology is driven purely for commercial
gain, that food is being perceived as nothing other than a lifeless
commodity, and that the real problem of world hunger is used
as a PR gimmick to facilitate the acceptance of this technology,
which is then used for a completely different and selfish purpose.
The global
monopolization of food by multinationals is occurring at an alarming
rate. Already a handful of companies own almost a half of the
worlds seed market. Seed distributors are being taken over by
big biotechnology companies. Soon farmers will have no choice.
And, therefore, neither will we. GM foods is an attempt to control
the world food market at the expense of the global environment
and the needs and desires of most of the worlds population.
Let us
now take a listen to the voices of delegates of 20 African countries
regarding the claim that biotechnology will help solve world
hunger - " We
strongly object that the image of
the poor and hungry is being used by multinational corporations
to push a technology that is neither safe, environmentally friendly,
nor economically beneficial to us
On the contrary,
we think that it <gene technologies> will destroy the diversity,
the local knowledge and the sustainable agricultural systems
that our farmers have developed for millennia and that it will
thus undermine our capacity to feed ourselves."
Some Final Comments
World hunger
is a real issue; there is no denying that. However it is becoming
very clear that it will not be eradicated by GM food. An overdependance
on technologies, to solve problems arising from social, political
and economic roots, will encourage the growth of further imbalances
and instability as a result of these fundamental issues being
left unaddressed. What is needed is the turning of our attention
to more basic problems, so that we can see what is there. As
we unravel these problems, more holistic strategies will need
to be implemented to help solve them; strategies which will produce
ripples of side-benefits, and not side-effects.
We also
need small communities to have more power, allowing them to be
actively involved in decisions that directly affect them. The
globalization of society increases bureaucracy, forgets the majority
and mostly remembers only the few multinationals - free trade
becomes more important than the freedom and needs of millions
of smaller groups. This is a complex issue but GM foods find
it easier to gain a foothold in this kind of political climate
and we hope to therefore address issues related to globalization,
on this web-site, in the future.
This web-site was
produced by Muzammal Hussain
Tel:
+44 (0)845 456 3960
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