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Steve Connor: Opponents of this crop trial are blind to the food crisis

 

Steve Connor
Sunday 27 May 2012 12:28 EDT
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The battle over GM food has begun again and it seems there is little in common between those in favour of research and those opposed, other than a belief that they are right and the other side is wrong.

These fundamental ideological differences are unlikely to be settled but it should at least be possible to dispel the irrational statements about this particular experiment that have gained traction over recent months.

The first is that this GM wheat contains cow genes. It does not. One of the synthetic genes added to the wheat plant just happens to bear some similarity to a gene found in cows, a gene incidentally found in many other organisms.

The second is that GM wheat contains antibiotic resistance genes that threaten to make drugs ineffective. These well-known “marker” genes were indeed used during the initial development but they are non functional in this plant.

Another criticism is that the GM wheat is a spring variety and only 1 per cent of wheat grown in the UK is spring wheat, which means there is not market for GM spring wheat.

Rothamsted deliberately chose spring wheat because of its rarity. It means there is even less chance of cross pollination with other varieties of wheat maturing at different times of the year, and any technology that works in spring wheat can be transferred to other wheat varieties.

The final criticism comes down the risk of this GM wheat contaminating other crops growing nearby. Wheat is self pollinating, and the risk of contamination is very small indeed, especially given the extra biosecurity measures taken by the scientists.

GM technology on its own will not feed the world. However, it does offer an extra tool for allowing this to happen. Preventing experiments such as this, where there is clearly a public benefit if it works, will equally do nothing to solve the coming food crisis of the 21st Century.

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