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GMOs, Monsanto and the fight against climate change

A storm hovers over an Illinois rural landscape on May 29, 2015. Extreme weather is likely to become more common in the Midwest under climate change conditions, according to researchers and federal reports.
Darrell Hoemann | Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting
A storm hovers over an Illinois rural landscape on May 29. Extreme weather is likely to become more common in the Midwest under climate change conditions, according to researchers and federal reports.

Twenty years ago, less than 10 percent of corn and soybean acres in the United States were planted with genetically engineered seeds, the type of biotechnology now commonly known as GMOs.

Farmers have rushed to adopt the engineered seeds since then, in part because of climate change concerns.

As a result, about 90 percent of all corn and soybean acres were GMOs last year, equivalent to an area larger than California. And U.S. Department of Agriculture data shows that St. Louis-based seed company Monsanto has spearheaded that seed biotechnology gold rush.

A Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting analysis of the USDA data found that Monsanto has been responsible for introducing 37 different genetically engineered seeds approved by the USDA.

That number is about one-third of all USDA-approved GMOs. Most of those approved seeds have been for corn, soybean and cotton.

Monsanto declined direct comment for this story, but CEO Hugh Grant and fellow executives discussed the company’s role in the fight against climate change in a recent business report.

“Today, no single issue will impact the world and the success of our farmer customers, our partners and our company more than sustainability, which includes our ability to adapt to and mitigate the impacts of climate change,” Grant said.

A Monsanto facility in Jerseyville, Ill., on May 19, 2015. Data shows the St. Louis-based seed company has secured more USDA-petition approvals for GMO crops than any other company or institution.
Credit Darrell Hoemann | Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting
A Monsanto facility in Jerseyville, Ill., on May 19, 2015. Data shows the St. Louis-based seed company has secured more USDA-petition approvals for GMO crops than any other company or institution.

Monsanto’s inventory of seeds has dwarfed its top competitors, which include businesses such as Syngenta and Pioneer, along with research institutions such as the University of Florida and Cornell.

Since 1992, data shows the USDA has approved at least 110 varieties of genetically engineered crops, including little known varieties for potatoes, tomatoes, papaya and rapeseed.

In the past five years alone, the department has approved at least 30 genetically engineered crop varieties, and it currently has six more pending deregulation.

“Planting of biotechnology traited seeds in the soybean industry has been very critical to our ability to increase production and make sure we have a high quality product,” said Ron Moore, a third-generation Illinois farmer and secretary of the board of directors for the American Soybean Association.

About three dozen groups have secured approval on genetically engineered crops, according to the USDA data.

Soybeans sprout out of the dirt on an Illinois farm on May 29. Nearly every single soybean acre planted in the United States is planted with genetically engineered seeds.
Credit Darrell Hoemann | Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting
Soybeans sprout out of the dirt on an Illinois farm on May 29. Nearly every single soybean acre planted in the United States is planted with genetically engineered seeds.

Monsanto’s success in the biotechnology industry contributed to the seed company netting $2.74 billion last year, detailed in its annual financial report.

Before a genetically engineered crop can be deregulated, it is extensively tested in field trials that require special permits and notifications. Trials to assure experimental crops do not pose risks to the health of already approved plants can take years to complete.

USDA data show that Monsanto has also tested the most GMOs.The company has received at least 6,700 authorized permits and notifications. In comparison, fellow international seed business Pioneer has only received a little more than 1,000.

“Sustainable intensification is the term we use to describe how today’s farmers are feeding more people with more efficient use of resources,” said Michael Louis, part of Monsanto’s sustainability team, in a statement. “One of the best ways to practice sustainable intensification is by ensuring that farmers have the best seeds possible — varieties that produce large harvests and better withstand the effects of climate change.”

In addition to USDA, the Environmental Protection Agency and Food and Drug Administration are also involved in the biotechnology deregulation process.

Despite support from Moore and other farmers who vouch for biotech’s role in the climate change battle, critics argue genetically engineered crops present health hazards to those who eat them and pesticide dangers to those who live near fields where they grow.

“When it comes to GMOs, the more we’ve looked into them throughout the years, the more concerned we’ve become,” said Patty Lovera, assistant director of the progressive-leaning consumer advocacy group Food and Water Watch.

Climate change impacts on agriculture

According to the White House’s2014 National Climate Assessment, average global temperatures are expected to rise between about 2 degrees and 6 degrees Fahrenheit by the mid-2000s. This rise in temperature will likely bring drought in some areas and wetter winters in others, experts say.

“Agriculture is going to be affected by climate change in a variety of ways,” said Jeff Dukes, director of the Purdue Climate Change Research Center. “Really, it’s already being affected.”

Warmer temperatures will likely create ideal conditions for diseases, insects and weeds. The tall yellow-green weed Palmer amaranth is moving north across Midwestern states at a rate by which growers say they’re alarmed.

Rootworm, beetle larvae that feast on the roots of plants, is one specific pest that Monsanto is trying to help farmers avoid through its rootworm­-resistant corn, which is pending USDA approval.

The rootworm-resistant crop closely follows two other Monsanto varieties of herbicide-resistant soybean and cotton that were approved earlier this year.

“That’s another wildcard, I think,” Dukes said. “Pests, disease, invasive species, weeds, insects and how they are going to change in the future.” Of the 110 varieties of approved GMOs, more than half of them target pests through built-in resistances.

Dukes said another significant way climate change will affect agriculture is through extreme weather. Rain will fall harder, and droughts will be more frequent within individual growing seasons, he said. “A big aspect of climate change is going to be change in extremes and not the change in the mean,” he said. Monsanto has one variety of drought-tolerant corn, deregulated in 2011. The U.S. agriculture industry produces nearly $330 billion a year in goods, so any negative impact on growers could result in hundreds of millions of dollars in loss.

Critics slow down GMO approval process

Consumer groups similar to Lovera’s have widely opposed the rapid rise of GMOs.

“The GMO model doesn’t really fit into what a lot of folks say we’re going to have to do to deal with climate change,” said Lovera, whose Food and Water Watch has been following what she called the “hot topic” of biotechnology for several years. “We don’t buy that argument.”

As part of that opposition, these groups have pushed for legislation mandating that foods produced with genetically engineered ingredients be assigned a special label. As a result, nearly half of the country has introduced state-level legislation addressing either the production or retail of genetically engineered foods since the start of 2015. The list of 22 states includes major agriculture powerhouses Illinois, Idaho and Missouri.

“GMO labeling is a really important topic to consumers because it just makes sense that they should get to know this,” Lovera said. “This is a basic piece of information about how a food is produced.”

There are also at least two pieces of federal legislation connected to GMOs. The “Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act of 2015” was introduced in the House by Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kans., and the “Genetically Engineered Food Right-to-Know Act” was introduced in both the House and Senate by Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., and Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. More than 60 countries require labeling of genetically engineered foods, according to the consumer advocacy group The Center for Food Safety.

The pushback has meant long wait times for growers looking to plant the next big biotech crop. Tamara Nelson, senior director of commodities at the Illinois Farm Bureau, said the criticism and hype has caused the regulatory process to slow down. “At the moment, our approval process for biotech crops is slower than Brazil and Canada’s, our two competitors,” Nelson said. “That is, I’m sure, not what anyone intended to happen.”

Monsanto’s dicamba-resistant cotton and soybean approved earlier this year took nearly a decade to test, petition and deregulate. During a public comment window within that process, nearly 5,000 individuals submitted comments, many against the crops. “It’s a bit of a challenge,” Nelson said. She said the sheer number of biotech crops that companies are coming up with is causing a backlog, as well. Even if it takes a little bit longer, farmers will continue to “readily adopt” new genetically engineered crops from Monsanto and other companies as long as the products are economically viable, said Moore, who added that farmers have always had to adjust to Mother Nature.

For now, though, he said that spring planting on his farm went “really well” and that he is looking forward to a “very prosperous year.” Anybody concerned about GMOs should talk to a farmer directly, Moore said. “We have to be proud of the fact that we raise food for people,” he said. “We have to show the consuming public why we do the things we do.

Story produced by Robert Holly of the Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting. Data visualization by Acton H. Gorton. Photos by Darrell Hoemann. To learn more, visit www.investigatemidwest.org