In Ireland
where the 1840’s potato famine killed a million people and made millions
more homeless why are hundreds of Irish men and women protesting against the
new genetically engineered blight-proof potato?
Can the modern Irish have forgotten the biggest disaster in their history?
A million Irish men, women and children starved because the late blight disease
suddenly destroyed the vital potato crop. Millions more Irish lost their homes
and farms and wandered the roads, subsisting on tree bark, weeds and whatever
else they could find. One million Irish emigrants boarded what became known
as “coffin ship,” sailing ships too often infested with typhus
and cholera, fleeing Ireland for the hope of better lives in the U.S. and
Canada.
Even today, Ireland is dotted with “famine cottages”—little
two-room stone houses, whose thatched roofs have long since rotted away. Their
walls still stand, however, as grim reminders of one of history’s biggest
crop disease disasters.
Ever since 1845, plant breeders have been urgently seeking blight-resistant
potatoes. Potatoes produce more food value per acre than any other crop, and
they are rich sources of vitamin C and other micronutrients. Countries such
as China, Bangladesh and Rwanda in the Central African highlands have become
more and more dependent on potatoes to feed their increasingly dense populations.
But the late blight has continued to worsen. Chemical sprays have been less
and less successful as the blight acquired resistance, and a virulent new
strain of the blight appeared in 1994. American potato growers have recently
had to spray their potato crops as many as 12 times per season. In warmer
climates like Mexico, up to 25 sprays have been needed. Organic farmers have
had to use heavy applications of toxic copper sulfate, preventively.
For the past 50 years, a genetic solution has been in hand—but unusable.
A gene for late blight resistance had been found by plant explorers in a wild
Mexican potato relative, Solanum bulbocastanum, which apparently
evolved along with the late blight microorganism. Unfortunately, plant breeders
could never cross-breed the wild potato relative’s blight resistance
into a domestic potato.
In the past decade, researchers finally seized the problem by the scruff of
its DNA and inserted the resistance gene directly into domestic potato using
biotechnology. The University of Wisconsin, the University of California/Davis
and Wageningen University in the Netherlands have all released blight-resistant
varieties. “So far, the plants have been resistant to everything we
have thrown at them, says Dr. John Hellgeson who led the Wisconsin research
team.
The Irish protestors say biotech potatoes would ruin their export market for
potatoes—but Ireland is not a major potato exporter. The protestors
say the blight-proof potatoes would put Irish farmers at the mercy of big
corporations. However, blight-resistance patents are held by public universities.
Chemical corporations make the pesticides, such as metalaxyl and copper sulfate,
on which potato growers currently depend. With resistance built-into the potato,
they’d be less dependent on chemical solutions.
Totally missing from the Irish potato protests is any empathy for the millions
of their ancestors who died or fled because of the late blight; Or compassion
for the farmers currently trying to grow potatoes in the face of virulent
new late blight spores; Or sympathy for the million Rwandans who hacked each
other to death in 1994 primarily for fear the country’s limited farmland
and dependence on blight-susceptible potatoes would lead to famine.
For a hundred years the Irish condemned the English overseers for exporting
Irish grain while the Irish starved—now, in a grim irony, the Irish
are trying to prevent a famine solution for themselves and billions of poor
people around the world.
At the next Irish potato protest, however, somebody should park a sound truck
playing the haunting Irish folk songs recalling the desperate wanderings and
continuing torments of the Irish potato famine’s millions of victims.
Dennis T. Avery is a senior fellow for Hudson Institute in Washington,
DC and the Director for Global Food Issues (www.cgfi.org). He was formerly
a senior analyst for the Department of State. Readers may write him at Post
Office Box 202, Churchville, VA 24421.
This article is reproduced by permission of the author.
Source:
Dennis T. Avery. Why would the Irish protest famine-proof potatoes?
MichNews.com (March 9th, 2006) (http://www.michnews.com/artman/publish/article_12019.shtml)
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