The heir
to the throne may wish to use his privileged position to promote his organic
produce while denigrating those of us who wish to use science to help feed
the world. But he should at least do so from a position of scientific evidence
rather than ideological dogma.
He shows a common misunderstanding of how agricultural science works. What's
worse, though, is that his comments risk reinforcing the mistrust felt by
much of the public about how their food is produced.
It might not fit the prince's image of honest toil in the fields but agriculture
has always evolved technologically. The agricultural revolution of the past
1,000 years or so has fallen into three overlapping stages - mechanical, chemical
and genetic.
The first involved the use of animals and then powered machinery to drive
cultivation equipment and tools. The second developed fertilisers such as
phosphate to enhance the fertility of soils. The third was about the development
of improved varieties of many crops.
The last is the key one here - not least because, from his comments, Prince
Charles appears to be against hybrid seeds as well as GM ones. One hundred
years ago a scientist named George Shull found that by crossing two different
varieties of maize, the new strain produced considerably higher yields and
grains of better and more consistent quality.
Many people found this characteristic both amazing and somewhat difficult
to believe - particularly as subsequent generations failed to exhibit these
characteristics to the same extent, which meant farmers were obliged to purchase
new seed each year. Some people accused Shull of practising "witchcraft"
and of producing a technology for his own ends. The similarity between these
facts and Prince Charles's position is remarkably similar.
This technique is known as hybridisation and almost all maize now grown is
from this "F1" seed - even though this costs farmers more than if
they saved their own. Patrick Holden, who is both director of the Soil Association
and a close friend of the prince, openly admits that he grows F1 carrots,
which are sold as organic. Presumably Prince Charles approves of this practice.
I am reminded of the suggestion made some time ago by Professor Steve Jones
of University College London that the best thing the prince could do would
be to take an A-level in biology: it would help him to understand the irrationality
of his position.
Modern seed varieties, whether bred by hybridisation, random genetic mutation
or by the more precise methods used by the "clever" genetic engineers
(as the prince describes them), continue to make a significant contribution
to agricultural productivity throughout the world. GM technology is merely
another stage in the process of producing better varieties of crops.
Like the other stages of the agricultural revolution, it comes with potential
downsides. But these are far outweighed by the enormous advantages it offers:
the potential to increase dramatically both yields and the quality of crops
harvested.
Moreover, GM crops are still in their infancy: the future gains are extremely
exciting. Think of the many thousands of people in Asia who suffer blindness
from a lack of vitamin A in their diet: rice, their primary source of carbohydrate,
contains no vitamin A. Yet the insertion of a single gene into rice plants
could help reduce this appalling condition dramatically - and this has been
made available free of charge by its developers.
Then there are the many farmers who would prefer not to spray their crops
with an insecticide when they could grow a variety - say of cotton - resistant
to certain pests.
Or ask the thousands of Spanish, German and French farmers already growing
GM varieties of maize whether they should be banned from doing so and you
will receive a very clear answer. And they are, relatively speaking, the rich
ones. Of the world's 12 million farmers, more than 90 per cent are regarded
as "resource poor" and derive more than 80 per cent of their income
from farming. For them, GM crops have the potential to transform their lives
for the better. We cannot deny the millions of people who might benefit from
this science by demanding that it be stopped, as Prince Charles is doing.
He also blames various ills on modern agriculture more generally - yet fails
to see that GM technology could be the solution. He is worried, for instance,
about the huge salination problems faced by farmers in many parts of the world.
Soil becoming too salty is indeed a problem in places - but GM technology
offers us the chance to develop crop varieties that will not just survive
but thrive in such conditions. Are we to understand that the prince would
like us to abandon the best chance we have of producing crops from areas of
land, which, for a variety of reasons, have become unusable? Surely not. He
frets that the world's food production is in the hands of a few massive companies
at the expense of many small farmers. Yet it is only through those companies'
substantial investment in science that we consumers will ever have the opportunity
to benefit from this technology.
It's not easy for the scientific community to address the concerns of the
small but highly influential organic farming lobby: the public don't speak
our language but they buy their organic beans. However, scientists have to
try. We need to use data properly assessed by independent experts such as
the Food Standards Agency.
The FSA finds no reason to believe that GM foods pose any higher risk than
foods made from conventionally farmed ingredients. Indeed, I would argue that
because they are far more rigorously tested than other foods, GM products
are almost certainly safer.
By the same token, organic farmers use pesticides, and some very dangerous
ones at that, including copper sulphate, a soil sterilant.
As Prince Charles sips his favourite whisky, he might like to consider that
it is almost certainly made using grain from plants bred thanks to advances
in plant biotechnology. Yes, your Highness - GM really does benefit us all.
• Jonathan Harrington is a chartered biologist specialising in agricultural
crop technologies.
Source:
Jonathon Harrington. Sorry, Your Highness, but science just isn't your
field. Evening Standard (14.8.08) (http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23532438-details/Sorry,Your+Highness,+but+science+just+isn%27t+your+field/article.do)
Reproduced with permission of the author
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