science
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Putting the causes of
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Gene-spliced crops use more
pesticides
GE crops use more
pesticides
by
PANUPS
A November 2003
study of levels of pesticide use on genetically engineered (GE)
corn, soybeans and cotton in the US reports that these GE
varieties have resulted in the application of more pesticides.
While use of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) transgenic varieties
have reduced pesticide use by an estimated 19.6 million pounds
in the past eight years, herbicide tolerant crops have been
responsible for the application of an estimated 70 million
additional pounds of pesticides. Overall, the report concludes
that GE crops have caused 50 million additional pounds of
pesticides to be used in US agriculture.
The first
comprehensive study of the impacts of all major commercial GE
crops on pesticide use in the US, "Impacts of Genetically
Engineered Crops on Pesticide Use in the United States: The
First Eight Years," draws on official US Department of
Agriculture data on pesticide use by crop and state to calculate
the difference between the average pounds of pesticides applied
on the 550 million acres planted to GE crops compared to the
pounds applied to similar conventional crops. The study results
directly contradict industry claims that GE technology has
markedly reduced pesticide use.
In 1996 to 1998,
during their first three years of commercial sales, GE crops
appear to have reduced pesticide use by about 25.4 million
pounds. But in the last three years, over 73 million more pounds
of pesticides were applied on GE acres. Substantial increases in
herbicide use on herbicide tolerant (HT) crops, especially
soybeans, accounted for the increase.
Herbicide
tolerant (HT) crops allow farmers to spray broad-spectrum
herbicides over the top of growing plants, controlling weeds
while leaving crops unharmed. Despite the increased costs of GE
seeds, herbicide tolerant crops have become less expensive as
the price of herbicides containing glyphosate has fallen by
half, from around $12 per acre when HT crops were first
introduced to less than $6 per acre today.
The report finds
that many farmers need to spray incrementally more herbicides on
GE acres in order to keep up with shifts in weeds toward tougher-
to-control species, coupled with the emergence of genetic
resistance in certain weed populations. "For years weed
scientists have warned that heavy reliance on herbicide tolerant
crops would trigger ecological changes in farm fields that would
incrementally erode the technology's effectiveness. It now
appears that this process began in 2001 in the US in the case of
herbicide tolerant crops," said Dr. Charles Benbrook,
author of the report.
The other major
category of GE crops, corn and cotton engineered to produce the
natural insecticide Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) in plant cells,
has reduced insecticide use by 2 million to 2.5 million pounds
annually. This reduction represents seven percent of the total
US insecticide use on these two crops. The report notes that the
increase in herbicide use on HT crop acres, however, far exceeds
the modest reductions of insecticides on acres planted to Bt
crops, especially since 2001.
Published by the
Northwest Science Environmental Policy Center, the report
received support from a number of organizations concerned about
the impacts of GE crops on the environment and human health. Dr.
Benbrook, Executive Director of the Northwest Science and
Environmental Policy Center in Sandpoint, Idaho, was formerly
with the National Academy of Sciences Board on Agriculture.
The full report
is available on Ag BioTech InfoNet website at http://www.biotech-
info.net/technicalpaper6.html.
Sources:
Press Release, Northwest Science and Environmental Policy
Center, November 25, 2003, http://www.biotech-
info.net/technicalpaper6.html.
Contact:
Northwest Science and Environmental Policy Center, phone 208-263-
5236, email benbrook@hillnet.com;
PANNA.
PANUPS is a
weekly email news service providing resource guides and
reporting on pesticide issues that don't always get coverage by
the mainstream media. It's produced by Pesticide Action Network
North America, a non-profit and non-governmental organization
working to advance sustainable alternatives to pesticides
worldwide.
face="Arial-Bold">Also in this
section:
Genome pioneer J. Craig Venter speaks in
Panama
Putting the causes of
Amazonia's deforestation in perspective
Long distance dispersal of
species
Mussel glue
Gene-spliced crops use more
pesticides
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