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Maharashtra Civil Disobedience Movement - GM Crops

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June 17, 2019

What it is the issue?

  • Over 1,000 farmers recently participated in a ‘civil disobedience’ movement in Akoli Jahagir village in Akola district of Vidarbha region of Maharashtra.
  • The defying of GM crops ban necessitates a quick and well-thought-out decision by the Central government on GM crops.

What was the move on?

  • The carrying, storing, selling or sowing of banned GM crops invites a Rs. 1-lakh fine and 5 years’ imprisonment.
  • But farmers outrightly defied the ban to cultivate HTBT (herbicide tolerant Bt) cotton and Bt brinjal.
  • They sowed genetically modified HTBT cotton on a 2-acre plot owned by a local farmer as a form of protest against the ban.
  • The police were present on the occasion, but they did not take any action against the farmers.
  • Farmers’ body Shetkari Sanghatana has decided to take the movement across the State.
  • They feel that the ban on GM crops was unfair on farmers who are reeling under poverty.
  • They also say that so far, no transgenic crop has been found to do any environmental harm.
  • They maintain that vested interests were opposing the use of Bt cotton and Bt brinjal.

What does this imply?

  • Farmers’ move has confirmed that the variety, which is unaffected by applications of the controversial weedicide glyphosate, is being grown in cotton-producing areas.
  • In 2001 too, Hyderabad-based Navbharat Seeds distributed illegal Bt cotton seeds in Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat.
  • It arguably put the Centre under pressure to legalise Bt cotton, produced by Mahyco-Monsanto.
  • It has also come to light that Bt brinjal is being illegally cultivated in Haryana.
  • All these indicate that farmers are largely willing to adopt technologies that offer promising and cost-effective solutions to pest attacks.

How has the issue evolved?

  • A decision on Bt brinjal has been on hold for nearly a decade.
  • The Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee cleared Bt brinjal in 2009.
  • But the Ministry of Environment held back its clearance, citing a lack of scientific consensus.
  • In the meantime, Bt brinjal grown in Bangladesh in particular has found its way into the Indian market.
  • Meanwhile, slow progress on approval in the government side has led to farmers undertaking illegal cultivation of GM crops.
  • On the other hand, activists and academics in the anti-GM camp have pointed ‘quasi-official’ leaks of GM varieties.

What are the larger concerns?

  • Breach of law - There is a scientific procedure to be followed for releasing new seeds for cultivation.
  • Farmers had not only broken the law but also made the country breach international biosafety conventions such as the Cartagena Protocol.
  • On the other hand, farmers resorted to such a drastic step as little is being done to save their crops from pests and pathogens.
  • Slow decision-Making - The environmental and health debate on GM varieties has been going on without any resolution in sight.
  • So, the Centre has avoided a decision on genetically modified varieties of brinjal, mustard and HTBT (herbicide tolerant Bt cotton).
  • The slow decision-making process by the government is costing farmers very dearly.
  • The prevailing uncertainty has affected both the producers and the consumers.

What is the way forward?

  • There can be no dismissing the concerns worldwide over the health effects of glyphosate.
  • However, in trying to curtail its use, farmers’ issues of rising pest attacks, in the context of drought and climate change, too need to be addressed.
  • Apparently, while Bt cotton strains have multiplied the yields, the benefits have declined with pests attack.
  • In all, the Centre needs to decide fast.
  • The Centre should adopt an open, consultative process so that producers' and consumers' interests are well served.
  • The issue of conserving traditional varieties as well as monitoring carcinogenic effects, if any, should be entrusted to public agencies.
  • Income support could help subsidise the cost of manual labour in carrying out weeding operations.
  • Meanwhile, public-funded R&D should take the lead in producing harmless alternatives.

 

Source: Business Line

Quick Facts

Glyphosate

  • Glyphosate is an herbicide that is applied to the leaves of plants to kill both broadleaf plants and grasses.
  • The sodium salt form of glyphosate is used to regulate plant growth and ripen specific crops.
  • Glyphosate stops a specific enzyme pathway, the shikimic acid pathway that is necessary for plants and some microorganisms.
  • Glyphosate is a non-selective herbicide, as it will kill most plants, preventing them from making certain proteins that are needed for plant growth.
  • Humans can be exposed to glyphosate if they get it on skin, in eyes or breathe it in when using it.
  • Humans might also swallow some glyphosate if they eat or smoke after applying it without washing hands.
  • Exposure may also take place by touching plants that are still wet with spray as Glyphosate is not likely to vaporize after it is sprayed.
  • Glyphosate is said to be carcinogenic, but this is highly debated.
  • Glyphosate binds tightly to soil; it can persist in soil for up to 6 months depending on the climate and soil type. So it is not likely to get into groundwater.
  • Glyphosate may affect fish and wildlife indirectly because killing the plants alters the animals' habitat.

HT Bt Cotton

  • Herbicide Tolerant Bt cotton in an innovation in the Bt cotton.
  • It offers the twin advantage of bollworm resistance and herbicide tolerance.
  • In comparison, the approved Bt variety (Bollgard I and Bollgard II) is only bollworm-resistant.
  • It takes care of the weeds problem at a much lower cost than the labour farmers engaging for weeding.

GEAC

  • The Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) functions in the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change.
  • It operates as per the Rules, 1989, under the Environment Protection Act, 1986.
  • It is responsible for appraisal of proposals relating to release of genetically engineered (GE) organisms and products into the environment including experimental field trials.
  • It applies to large scale use of hazardous microorganisms and recombinants in research and industrial production from the environmental angle.
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