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Excerpt: "Monsanto’s new drought tolerant corn, DroughtGard, reduces crop losses only modestly during moderate droughts, and will not reduce the crop’s water requirements..."

Monsanto's 'DroughtGard' corn does not solve the drought problem. (photo: Monsanto)
Monsanto's "DroughtGard" corn does not solve the drought problem. (photo: Monsanto)


Monsanto's "DroughtGard" Corn Barely a Drop in the Bucket

By Union of Concerned Scientists

22 July 2012

 

Report finds limited prospects for genetically engineered crops to combat drought and conserve water.

onsanto’s new drought tolerant corn, DroughtGard, reduces crop losses only modestly during moderate droughts, and will not reduce the crop’s water requirements, according to a report released today by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). The report found that traditional breeding and improved farming practices have done more to increase drought tolerance, and that further improvements in genetic engineering are unlikely to solve the drought problem in coming years.

"Farmers are always looking to reduce losses from drought, but the biotechnology industry has made little real-world progress on this problem," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist with UCS’s Food & Environment Program and author of the report. "Despite many years of research and millions of dollars in development costs, DroughtGard doesn’t outperform the non-engineered alternatives."

Agriculture accounts for about 70 percent of all water extracted from rivers and wells, making drought a serious and costly problem for farmers. An extreme drought is still plaguing Texas, triggering a record $5.2 billion in agricultural losses in 2011 alone. Monsanto’s new corn is not likely to provide any practical help under such conditions, even by the company’s guarded claims.

The report, High and Dry: Why Genetic Engineering is Not Solving Agriculture’s Drought Problem in a Thirsty World, found that during limited testing, DroughtGard-the only crop engineered for drought tolerance approved for commercial use-reduced crop losses by about 6 percent. By comparison, breeding and improved farming practices have increased drought tolerance by roughly 1 percent per year over the past several decades.

In terms of crop yields, DroughtGard will increase overall corn production by about 1 percent because it is likely to be of practical value on only about 15 percent of U.S. corn acreage. Breeding and improved farming practices increase corn production by about 1.5 to 2 percent annually.

"If we were to conduct an apples-to-apples comparison today, we’d find that breeding and improved farming practices have increased drought tolerance in corn about two to three times faster than DroughtGard," said Gurian-Sherman. "Classical and newer forms of breeding are also far cheaper."

DroughtGard is further handicapped by the fact that it will work well only under moderate drought conditions, and climate scientists predict that drought frequency and severity likely will increase in some regions as climate change worsens, Gurian-Sherman said. The fact that drought is not predicable also makes it difficult for farmers to decide whether it is worthwhile to buy DroughtGard seed prior to the growing season.

Finally, Monsanto’s advertising campaigns touted its intention to develop seeds that yield "more crop per drop," but there is no evidence that DroughtGard will help the crops or farmers use water more efficiently. And the biotech industry’s pipeline for other water-efficient crops is virtually dry.

Congress and the U.S. Department of Agriculture can help farmers address droughts by substantially increasing support for public crop-breeding programs in the Farm Bill, Gurian-Sherman said. The Farm Bill also should fund research and offer incentives for farmers to adopt practices that improve drought tolerance such, as organic farming and similar methods that improve the soil’s ability to retain moisture.

"The fact that DroughtGard may provide modest drought tolerance is a small step forward for the industry, but it’s being outpaced by other methods," said Gurian-Sherman. "More Farm Bill investments in public-sector classical breeding and water-saving farming practices would be more cost-effective for taxpayers and farmers, and as the scientific track record to date shows, will help farmers far more than genetic engineering."

 

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+3 # SMoonz 2012-07-22 20:09
No wonder Monsanto is pushing global warming. They have products they want to push down our throats?
 
 
+13 # Street Level 2012-07-22 21:17
"DroughtGard" should be called what it is: "ProfitGard". How many transgenic failures do we have to see before we do something like modify our cultural practices?
It burns me that the bible thumping GOP, who don't believe in evolution, global warming or stem cell research is pushing GMO's like it was a commandment putting 9 new ones on the Farm Bill while cutting thousands of families from food assistance.
I'd be happy if they'd just start with lining irrigation ditches.
 
 
+3 # Holmes 2012-07-22 22:19
If my memory is correct, to make corn much more drought tolerant will require genes from say the sorghum's which close down as things get dry so that that the soil is not dried out as fast. This allows the crop to survive a bit longer till the next rainfall event. However this reduces yield potential if the plants go into drought mode too soon. (discussions at morning coffee with a sorghum breeder in the dry tropics)

However I feel that if we are to get very good drought tolerance, we will need something like the systems as used in the cacti That will be a major GMO.

However, no moisture, normally means no yield.
 
 
+10 # dovelane1 2012-07-23 01:25
In an article on Alternet (7/20/2012) titled :Dust Bowl Drought," the article stated that the current world average temperature is 1 degree Fahrenheit warmer than the dust bowl years in the 1930's. We've gotten by using better land management techniques.

The article states that unless the world starts changing its priorities immediately, they expect the temperature to rise another 9 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit, and we have five years or less before the tipping point is reached, and climate change will be out of our control.

A good start might be growing a lot less corn, as it is a crop that needs a lot of water. Prarie grasses and other grains use a lot less water than corn, and you get 16 times the available food. That was mentioned in the book "Mad Cowboy," written by a guy who used to grow cattle in feed lots, until he found out how destructive, and wasteful the practice was.
 
 
0 # forparity 2012-07-23 16:09
interestingly enough (sorry about the columns not lining up):

19 Of The Top 20 US Extended Heatwaves
Based on USHCN daily raw max temp's.

Hottest 5 month periods in the US
Rank Year Temperatur e
1 1936 85.4938
2 1934 84.9094
3 1939 84.1594
4 1931 83.9594
5 1933 83.8344
6 1952 83.6125
7 1937 83.45
8 1911 83.3859
9 1922 83.3766
10 1931 83.3625
11 1936 83.3375
12 1988 83.3156
13 1930 83.2594
14 1953 83.1406
15 1921 83.0953
16 1998 83.0344
17 1980 83.0312
18 1925 82.9984
19 1914 82.9578
20 1955 82.9531

Aslo, if one goes to NCDC, here, http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/cag3/state.html

And pull the plots from 1895-2012, and look at the 7 states hit the hardest in the dust bowl of 1939, interesting things jump out.

New Mex, TX, OK, Neb, Wyo, Kansas, CO.

Yes, in all states but Texas, there is a slight warming trend from the starting point to present - Texas is dead flat.

However, in all the states except for New Mex and TX - where current/recent is about the same as the 1930's and a few other hot spells, the 1939 stretch was indeed warmer than anything sense.

Also interesting, is that NCDC just rated the mo of June for the US as the 14th warmest on record. Hmm

" . .the 14th warmest June in 118 years."

- news sounded a bit worse.
 
 
0 # Texas Aggie 2012-07-23 13:03
I'm not sure what the UCS's point is in this article. They are claiming that this strain doesn't work as well as other strains, so why are there severe losses going on now if the other strains have been improving 1% per year for the last couple decades? Why haven't those strains of corn been planted?

I get the feeling that what we have here is another attack on a particular method of genetic manipulation that is different from "tradition" and thus must be opposed. No one is forcing anyone to buy DroughtGard so if it isn't as good, then the hybrids that are better will make money instead. What is the real agenda here?

I am bothered by what amounts to religious opposition, and even more so when scientists engage in it.
 
 
0 # forparity 2012-07-23 15:24
Corn yields have been improving so much during the past 6-7 decades:

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-xvXFI0JCiWI/TdUfddo8LTI/AAAAAAAAPUY/0BDn-eKJYRo/s400/corn.jpg

Perhaps that because of the increased C02 in the atmosphere.
 

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