Anti-Technology Kills
by Dennis and Alex Avery
Issue 96 -
November 21, 2007
The global conflict over high-yield farming became even uglier recently
when armed activists "for the landless" invaded a Brazilian biotech
research
farm. One activist and a security guard were killed and eight other
people
injured.
Unfortunately, the clash over modern farming technology has already had
victims by the millions. New technologies that would save millions of
lives
every year are being held back by activist-scared regulators, using the
excuse of "more testing."
- During the severe southern African drought of 2002,
eco-activists
told local governments that American food aid was "poison" because it
contained genetically modified seeds. In at least one country, Zambia,
the
government locked up the U.S. food aid-despite the starvation of
thousands
in outlying villages. The food aid was later liberated by a mob that
overwhelmed its armed guards.
- Golden rice could provide enough Vitamin A to prevent millions
of
cases of childhood blindness and death from rice-dominated diets per
year,
but it is not yet available to farmers even though it was announced by
the
journal Science nearly eight years ago. Its developer, Ingo Potrykus of
the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, says his rice can save millions
of
lives among the poor, with no threat to the environment, no cost to the
poor
farmers who will raise it, and no benefit to corporations. Nevertheless,
Greenpeace and other eco-groups ardently oppose this and all other
genetically modified seeds. Potrykus says they'd rather have people die
than
be saved by high-tech seeds.
- African countries refused to allow the import of biotech corn
seeds
that could have helped overcome the parasitic witchweed, which infests
40
million hectares of African farmland. The International Maize and Wheat
Improvement Center had to spend an extra 10 years conventionally
breeding a
natural tolerance for the herbicide imazapyr into African corn farmers'
varieties. The new seeds reliably yield four times as much corn,
providing
food security for farmers too used to facing starvation because the
witchweed stole their grain.
- The Irish government has refused to accept test plantings of a
new
biotech potato variety resistant to the deadly potato late blight. This
is
the same blight that caused the Irish Potato Famine in the 1840s when
more
than a million Irish starved and more than a million more were forced to
flee the country. Researchers found resistance to late blight nearly 50
years ago in a wild relative of the potato, but it had never been
successfully bred into a domestic potato. Now, three major universities
have
each bred blight-resistant tubers-and the country which suffered the
potato
famine won't allow them to be grown. Nor will such African countries as
Burundi, which are increasingly dependent on potatoes. An outbreak of a
more
virulent late blight virus continues unchecked in Britain.
How many people have to die before this travesty of Luddite worship runs
its
course?
How many helpless children will have to go blind before the endless
testing
of Golden Rice allows it to be distributed to the families who so
critically
need it?
When will the world realize that Greenpeace and the World Wildlife Fund,
for
all their preaching about the rain forests, are trying to roll back
modern
civilization and its long life spans with thickets of overpriced solar
panels and windmills? They willingly fail to see that without the high
yields from the Green Revolution and biotechnology, hungry people will
quickly clear the world's remaining forests for low-yield crops.
DENNIS T. AVERY is a senior fellow for Hudson Institute in Washington,
D.C.
and is the Director for Center for Global Food Issues (www.cgfi.org). He was formerly a senior analyst for the
Department of State. ALEX A. AVERY is the Director of Research at the
Hudson Institute's Center for Global Food Issues.
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