English 1A
Genetically Modified Crops are the Future of Agriculture
Abstract:
This paper explores five different published articles containing information
on the pros and cons of genetically modified food and why genetically modified crops
are the future of agriculture. The articles vary in their support or disapproval of GMOs.
Toft believes GMOs are the future of agriculture due to the rising use of GMO farming
and being able to farm more food on less land. Schonwald talks about the health
benefits humans can receive from GMOs. Brookes and Barfoot talk about the effect
GMOs have on the environment. Miflin argues GMOs have been around for thousands
of years, by providing proof of cross breeding from those times, and are risky but the
impressive record they hold matters more. Smith disapproves of GMOs and discusses
the potential harmful effects they can have.
Genetically modified organisms are the future of agriculture even when there
are many people who support and oppose its purpose. The good of GMO farming is that
it can create more food on a less amount of land to supply for more people. The vast
majority of countries have made GMO farming their primary food source. It can help to
save lives with its excess nutritional value and the ability to prevent certain diseases.
The genes of GMO plants can be passed to neighboring traditional farms and those
crops can grow to be pest resistant. The environment will become less polluted due to
GMO farming. There are some cons to GMO farming such as the diseases obtained from
tests conducted on animals. The genes can be passed into humans through
consumption and even change some vital functions of the body. The chemicals required
to create GMOs cost a lot of money. Also the GMO agriculture system conflicts with
traditional farming and could change the agriculture ecosystem.
In an analysis conducted in 2012, Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs)
Kristian Toft goes into detail about the GMO farming industry expanding to all countries
around the globe. She argues that genetically modified crops are the future of
agriculture since they are on the only crops capable of producing the amount of food
needed for the global population. In her argument she shows the importance of GMO
farming fields and the rates of how much more GM crop is planted every year.
Developing countries are even planting GM crops and are increasing the amount of land
used substantially every year. GM crops were first introduced in 1996 and since then
they are now planted on 3.7 billion acres each year. Toft has provided evidence of 15
million small resource poor-farmers gaining a substantial income from growing GM
crops. Toft got his information from Jahea Lee, interactive producer at Mother Jones,
and the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA).
GM crops are the future of the agriculture industry because the amount of food GMO
farming produces is already out-producing traditional farming methods for starving
countries.
Another article by journalist John Schonwald written in 2012 focuses on how
genetically modified crops can help save lives and have a huge impact on the health of
millions of people. He believes GMOs can make humans live healthier lives and save
their lives from diseases. One of the GM crops Schonwald talks about is golden rice,
which was created in a lab and is widely opposed by non-GM activists around the world.
Golden rice is fortified with vitamin A and over 250 million children in developing
countries, and around the world, die or go blind from lack of this essential vitamin. If
this GM crop could be available to the children in need then it could save millions of
lives. Schonwald believes by 2030 GM fruits and vegetables will take over, as they will
contain all the necessary nutrients human bodies need. Health benefits such as breeding
the “ fountain of youth” gene into GM crops can improve human life and potentially
slow the aging process. Schonwald states we should not “miss opportunities to build a
long-term sustainable future for our planet” (Schonwald p. 46). The GM crops will be
much more nutritional than traditional grown crops. The genes of these GMOs can
create more productive farm animals such as cows being able to produce more milk
than usual. Many vaccines can be introduced through GMOs which will help to save
people from certain illnesses. He recieved his information from the World Health
Organization and various biologists from universities around the United States
conducting experiments on GMOs. GMOs can benefit society and save millions of
people’s lives every year.
In a brief analysis by Graham Brookes and Peter Barfoot conducted in 2010, they
discuss how the use of pesticides when farming GM crops has been reduced by 443
million kg and is helping keep less green house gas from polluting the air. The impact of
GMOs had on green house gas emission in 2010 was equivalent to taking 8.6 million cars
off the road.( Brookes,Barfoot P.133) This is a huge environmental benefit and can help
the devastating climate change the world is going through. The GM crops are resistant
to pests, which make herbicides and insecticides no longer needed to keep the crops
alive and growing.The benefits of the GM crops and their resistance to pests can spread
to neighboring fields through a bacterial toxin that is lethal to pests but not to humans.
This will allow traditional farmers, who have fields nearby to GM farmers, the ability to
not use insecticides which will save them a lot of money. GMOs are good for the
environment and can help in many different ways. They can help traditional farmers as
well as reduce the pollution in the air. This adds to the benefits of GMO use around the
globe.
Ben Miflin wrote an article in 2011 which talks about GMOs actually being
around for thousands of years due to the manipulation of genes in crops. He supports
GMOs and believes they have helped provide the world with crops for a very long time.
In his article he talks about wheat, the world’s major crop, being a hybrid of different
species. This proves humans have been altering crops since 10,000 years ago. Even
though the occurrence happened naturally, people maintained its mutation artificially
and expanded similar hybrid tactics to different crops. The modern GM wheat we use
cannot exist in the wild because we have been using the hybrid for so long thus the GM
wheat cannot spread its seed. Miflin also talks about GM crops being the most regulated
crops in existence due to the high controversy about them. GM crops have to pass
rigorous regulations in order to be accepted to be sold on the market. GMOs have been
around a lot longer than people think they have. Purposeful breeding and GM crops are
similar but not exactly the same. Purposeful breeding is combining two or more breeds
of crops and cross breeding them to make one new crop. GM crops are created in a
laboratory.
Jeffrey Smith discusses why people should be against GMOs and not
support them in an article called The Fight Against GMOs written in 2011. He does not
believe GMOs will help fight against hunger in starving countries. He discusses
GMOs tested on animals and the illnesses they obtained from them. In one study
various animals were diagnosed with infertility, immune dysregulation, increased aging,
and changes to major organs in the body(Smith p.21). The reason for no humans being
diagnosed with any of these diseases is because there are no human trials for GMOs.
Tests are only conducted on animals so outside of the laboratory GMOs can look
harmless to human consumption. More than 70% of the food on supermarket shelves
contains 8 GMO derivatives. The Food and Drug Administration(FDA) is against the use
of GMOs and warns of the potential consequences they may have. He also reveals
GMOs use more pesticides and insecticides. The increase of these uses would bring
more pollution to the environment. This article speaks against GM crops as the future
of agriculture because the author is saying GMOs can cause diseases, but tests have only
been conducted on animals. Many doctors and organizations support Smith’s article.
Smith says the FDA warns of the consequences of GMOs yet there is no evidence of
humans having any consequences from eating GM crops. GM crops have also been
proven to use less insecticides and pesticides so Smith is wrong when he says GM crops
increase their use.
People should not fear GMOs based on genetic mutations. GMOs have
proven to be the crop of the future and without them we will not be able to feed the
world of an increasing population. The tests in Smith’s article have only been conducted
on animals so it has no validity for human consumption of GMOs. Also GMOs have been
proven to reduce insecticide and pesticide use due to the genetically modified
insecticides built into them. GMOs have helped to reduce the pollution in the
environment so environmentalists should be pro GMOs. Diseases that are transmitted
through conventional crops can be prevented with GMOs, which would mean fewer
people with illnesses. GMOs are the future of agriculture and without them our
existence will be threatened. GMO food can be forced to label that it is a GMO on its
packaging, but the complete recall of all GMOs would devastate the world as a whole.
References
Brookes, G., & Barfoot, P. (2010). Global impact of biotech crops: Environmental
Effects, 1996-2010. GM Crops and Food, 3(2), 129-137.
doi:10.4161/gmcr.20061.
Miflin, B. (2011). Agbioworld. Retrieved from
http://www.agbioworld.org/biotech-info/articles/biotech-
art/in_favor.html
Schonwald, J. (2012). Engineering the Future of Food. Futurist, 46(3), 24.
Smith, J.M. (2011). The Fight Against GMOs. Share Guide, (114), 10-33.
Toft, K. (2012). GMOs and Global Justice: Applying Global Justice Theory to the
Case of Genetically Modified Crops and Food. Journal of Agricultural &
Enviornmental Ethics, 25(2), 223-237
References: Brookes, G., & Barfoot, P. (2010). Global impact of biotech crops: Environmental Effects, 1996-2010 Miflin, B. (2011). Agbioworld. Retrieved from http://www.agbioworld.org/biotech-info/articles/biotech- Smith, J.M. (2011). The Fight Against GMOs. Share Guide, (114), 10-33. Toft, K. (2012). GMOs and Global Justice: Applying Global Justice Theory to the Case of Genetically Modified Crops and Food