Baseless criticism cost farmers a fortune: GM crop developer

As controversy grips the indigenously developed Genetically Modified (GM) mustard – a crop which scientists say will address India’s food security and farmer’s troubles – the man who developed the variety has termed this an issue that has gone too far.

By :  migrator
Update: 2016-10-25 17:25 GMT

New Delhi

Dr Deepak Pental, geneticist at Delhi University, has dedicated 30 years of his life to research and led the team that developed Dhara Mustard Hybrid (DMH)-11. He spoke of myths associated with DMH11. He stressed it is safe, has undergone all tests and field trials and that “unscientific criticism” had been costing both science and farmers a fortune in the 14 years since it was developed. 

“We are living in the age of misinformation. There is so much ignorance around that one can say anything absurd and get away with it,” Pental said, when asked about the accusations of social and environment activists on the safety of GM Mustard. Amid stiff opposition from the anti-GM lobby, the fate of the crop depends on a Union Environment Ministry committee. If released, the GM Mustard will, however, “not be the first genetically-engineered food crop produced in India”, as oil coming from another GM crop, BT Cotton, is already being consumed in Vanaspati (hydrogenated vegetable cooking oil) – the second-most consumed domestic oil in the country. 

BT Cotton – a fibre, food and cattle feed crop – is grown over 10 million hectares in India and is showing rapid growth since its approval in 2002. As per government records, India imported in 2015-16 edible oil worth Rs 68,000 crore ($10 billion), most coming from the GM crops such as Canola produced from rapeseed and cultivated over four million hectares in Canada. 

“That money should have gone to the Indian farmers. The irony is that we are already consuming products from GM crops, including soybean and palm, imported from all over the world; yet (we are) opposing it here,” Pental said. According to Pental, DMH-11 can increase mustard production by 20-30 per cent in its first yield and 40-50 per cent later – without the use of any fertiliser. Though not customised, it is resistant to white rust, alternaria blight and stem rot – three common mustard diseases. 

DMH-11 was developed as a hybrid from Indian and East European mustard using the same technology (but different parent) as done in Canada in the 1990s. “In 1998, GM Mustard in Canada yielded 16 per cent extra which has increased to 38 per cent currently,” he said. Rebuffing assertions that this crop would be monopolised by multinational companies (MNCs) he said: “This is the first technology in the world which is completely funded, owned and patented by the public sector and not multinationals.” The crop has undergone field trials for two years in Rajasthan and one year in Punjab and Delhi.

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