Food Perverter Monsanto Receives Top Honors From World Food Prize
For the first time in its 27-year history, a prestigious award for enhancing the global food supply has gone to a creator of genetically modified crops, a top scientist at Monsanto. The choice is likely to add more heat to an intense debate about the role biotechnology can play in combating world hunger.
Robert T. Fraley, Monsanto’s executive vice president and chief technology officer, will share the $250,000 World Food Prize with
two other scientists who helped devise how to insert foreign genes into
plants: Marc Van Montagu of Belgium and Mary-Dell Chilton of the United
States.
The announcement was made in Washington on Wednesday, accompanied by a speech from Secretary of State John Kerry.
The prize was started in 1987 by Norman E.
Borlaug, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for bringing about the
Green Revolution, which vastly increased grain output, and who thought
there should be a Nobel Prize for agriculture. The award is given to
those who improve the “quality, quantity or availability” of food in the
world.
The prize has some public relations value for
Monsanto, potentially buttressing the case for bioengineered food, which
has met with some resistance around the world.
The World Food Prize Foundation said the work
of the three scientists led to the development of crops that can resist
insects, disease and extremes of climate, and are higher-yielding.
Genetically engineered crops, which for the
most part contain genes from bacteria, now account for roughly 90
percent of the corn, soybeans and cotton grown in the United States.
Globally, genetically modified crops are grown on 420 million acres by
17.3 million farmers, over 90 percent of them small farmers in
developing countries, according to the International Service for the
Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications, an organization that promotes
use of biotechnology.
But the crops are shunned in many countries
and by many consumers, who say the health and environmental effects of
the crops have not been adequately studied. And the role the crops can
play in increasing yields and helping farming adapt to climate change is
still subject to some debate. One study organized by the World Bank and
United Nations concluded in 2008 that genetically modified crops would
play only a small role in fighting world hunger.
“I’m sure there will be some controversy about
it,” Kenneth M. Quinn, the president of the World Food Prize
Foundation, said in an interview before the winners were announced. “At
the same time the view of our organization and our committee is that in
the face of controversy, you shouldn’t back away from your precepts. If
you do so, you are diminishing the prize.’’
Mr. Quinn, a former United States ambassador
to Cambodia, said crop biotechnology had “met the test of demonstrating
it would impact millions of people and enhance their lives.’’
Mr. Quinn is not a member of the committee
that selects the prize winners. That committee is led by M. S.
Swaminathan, an Indian geneticist and the winner of the first World Food
Prize in 1987. The names of the other committee members are kept secret
to shield them from lobbying.
The winners of the 2013 prize were part of
teams that independently developed methods three decades ago for putting
foreign genes into the DNA of plants.
The key was a soil microbe called
Agrobacterium tumefaciens, which can inject its own DNA into plants,
causing a tumorlike growth called crown gall disease. The researchers
disabled the tumor-causing part of the bacterium and inserted the gene
that they wanted to be carried into the plant’s DNA.
Scientists from the three teams, which were
fiercely competing with one another, presented their results at a
conference in Miami in January 1983. That essentially marked the birth
of the crop biotechnology business, though it took more than a decade
for the first genetically modified crops to come to market.
Dr. Van Montagu, who did his research at Ghent
University, founded two biotechnology companies, Plant Genetic Systems
and Crop Design.
Dr. Chilton, who did much of her research at
the University of Washington and Washington University in St. Louis,
became the core of the biotechnology team at Syngenta, where she still
works.
Monsanto started later than the other two
teams, but it helped finance their work and was therefore able to learn
from them and catch up, eventually dominating the crop biotechnology
business, according to “Lords of the Harvest,” a book about Monsanto by
Daniel Charles.
A big reason was Dr. Fraley, who was hired by
Monsanto as a molecular biologist in 1981 but soon moved beyond
tinkering with plant cells as he rose up the ranks at the company.
He harbored “oversized ambitions and visions
of a business empire in the making,” Mr. Charles wrote. The book
described Dr. Fraley as “preternaturally self-confident” and driven, a
Midwest farm boy who did not want to go back to the tractor and instead
preferred the perks of corporate life, like fancy clothes and sports
cars.
Monsanto’s biggest successes have been
soybeans and other crops that can tolerate its herbicide Roundup,
allowing farmers to kill weeds without harming the crop.
Dr. Borlaug, the founder of the food prize,
who died in 2009, was a big supporter of the technology. Past winners
have included scientists, politicians and leaders of advocacy and
charity groups.
The prize was endowed by John Ruan, an Iowa
trucking magnate and philanthropist who died in 2010. But the prize
foundation also receives contributions.
Of the roughly $8 million in contributions
received in 2011, Monsanto gave $40,000, Syngenta nearly $50,000 and
DuPont Pioneer, a seed company, $280,000, according to the foundation’s
report to the Internal Revenue Service. Far bigger contributions were
received from the state of Iowa, where the prize foundation is based,
and from some nonprofit organizations like the Rockefeller Foundation. source – NY Times
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