Tuesday, August 27, 2013

On an article on GMOs

In response to an article in the Sacramento News & Review, first published in the Village Voice. Perhaps demonstrating their utter lack of commitment to balance they did not publish this piece, or a short letter to the editor I wrote previously. They did print 2 sappy praise letters for the execrable piece that 'inspired' me to write this:
 
I have problems with corporate capitalism. I see the practices that corporations engage in as being, more often than not, exploitative of workers, duping and deceitful to consumers, duplicitous and evasive to regulators, and corrupting to politicians. It’s the nature of the game, and it sucks. We should throw spanners into the works when we can. This is why it’s hard to read some of the stuff that gets published on a subject such as GMOs, where rational thought and science are left in the dust of fear-mongering and paranoid fantasies. I find myself in such opposition to this stuff that I end up nearly coming down on the side of one of those corporate beasts. This was especially true of the article by Chris Parker in the 8/1/13 issue of SN&R (first published in 7/25/13 issue of The Village Voice).

            Mr. Parker doesn’t wait a minute to start with the appeal to fear, and the fallacy of misleading vividness when he cites Monsanto’s ‘random killing’, ‘take control of the world’s food supply’, ‘Franken-crops’. Such wording elicits shock even though they have little relationship to reality. The article is filled with ostentatious waving of oversized red flags around in this manner, with little corroboration or backing offered for some rather outlandish statements.

            For example, Parker has ‘agents’ of Monsanto lurking in the bushes and the coffee shops, secretly videotaping, infiltrating, intelligence gathering, pretending to be surveyors, bullying farmers…this poor guy has been watching too many movies. When statements like these are made a journalist really needs to inform his readers of where the information has originated, and it better be from multiple reliable sources. Parker does no such thing; it’s all pulled out of his hat! I have dealings with farmers and grower organizations in my work – none of them have mentioned anything like this. None of them are ‘terrified’. Later Parker attributes the question ‘Trust Us. Why Would We Lie?’ to Monsanto. In fact, he is asking the very same question to his readers about himself. He gives us little reason to trust him.

            A few studies are cited in the time-honored tradition of cherry-picking – a disconcertingly common form of argument among anti-GMO folks. What one typically does is not just cite the reference that supports your a priori belief, but also cite others that produce different results…like what happens in the real world of science, and good journalism; but not in this fictional one. Of course, one would have to actually read those other works, and think about them, and weigh the evidence…not the strong suit of someone like Mr. Parker. The weight of evidence is important in science. A 2009 study by Gurian-Sherman that failed to support the claim that GM crops produce higher yields is discussed, but no inkling is given that studies have been mixed on this issue. Besides the fact that GM crops currently in commercial use are not generally engineered for greater yield directly, many studies have found that they do have greater yield than conventional crops (A 2-part review in Annual Review of Plant Biology (2008 & 2009) by Peggy Lemaux, of UC, Berkeley, provides an excellent review and entry into the scientific literature in general.).

            Another argument put forth by Parker (and others) is that the FDA ‘approves GM crops by doing no testing of its own; it simply takes Monsanto's word for their safety.’ It is not the purview of the FDA to approve GM crops. They approve foods. As such, they are downstream in the regulatory process from Monsanto and its immediate products. It is the EPA and USDA that approve GM crops (or the transgenes and their products in the case of the EPA); all 3 agencies play a role however. While they do no testing of an applicant’s products on their own they do not ‘take Monsanto’s word for it’. They require specific studies with the cost of the research to be borne by the applicant (not the taxpayers), and they subject the data, results, and interpretations of the applicant to scrutiny by expert scientists. If the methods or data are found wanting, more data is required. (This all comes at a cost of from $6-15 million (Nature Biotechnology 25:509–11), a major reason why public institutions don’t play a greater role.) Some of this ends up in the peer-reviewed literature and so goes through another layer of scrutiny. Not ideal, but a far cry from ‘taking their word for it.’ One can make a reasonable case for the insufficiency of testing of GM crops, and foods derived from them, but what we have here is something else. Lying is not the best tactic for a ‘journalist’.

            Parker states ‘Monsanto understood early on that the best way to stave off bad publicity was to limit research.’ A simple search on Genamics (correct spelling) Journal Seek (http://journalseek.net/) found 227 journals publishing on genetic engineering. How has research been ‘staved off’? Citing a filmmaker as source, Parker claims that ‘95 percent of genetic-engineering research is paid for and controlled by corporations like Monsanto.’ You mean all those people who I’ve heard speak at conferences, whose papers I’ve read, who worked in universities, and who were funded by the NIH and the NSF and the USDA were only the 5%? I really want a better source of data than a filmmaker here (who has been doing some cherry picking of his own). I don’t have much time but I looked in the acknowledgements in the first 10 papers from 2013 I found that involved genetic engineering and only 1 group received funding from Monsanto. That’s 10% (of a very small sample, true). And no, the scientists are not all keeping it a big secret. Certainly Monsanto (and Syngenta et al.) does extensive in-house research that is not shared, and more of the pie should go to public institutions, but 95% is a stretch. In fact, while 80% of the commercialization of GM crops has come from corporations, a substantial amount of the research innovation comes from public institutions (Lemaux, 2009, cited above).

            Finally, on GM crops and resistance to pesticides and pesticide use: weeds and insects become resistant to any strategy to kill them. Always have, always will. Resistance to Bt crops has actually been much longer in coming (few examples after 15 years) than to conventional insecticides (usually after about 1-3 years). Parker cites pesticide use data from a 2012 paper by Charles Benbrook (though he doesn’t say so, perhaps fearful that readers would see how few sources he uses). He doesn’t mention another 2012 paper by Brookes and Barfoot that contradicts Benbrook’s results. I found Benbrook’s analysis fairly persuasive but Parker doesn’t tell the whole story. Insecticide use in Bt crops has decreased by 123 million pounds over the same period, indicating an ecological benefit of these crops. The overall increase is from herbicide use (not surprising when you have crops specifically engineered to tolerate them to allow easier spraying–a misguided innovation, its true). Note as well, that while many weeds have evolved resistance to Round-Up in the presence of Round-Up Ready crops; just as many have in conventional crops. Round-Up gets used too much! Period! (Actually the active ingredient, glyphosate, which is now used in dozens and dozens of products not owned by Monsanto.) The nub is that if they dropped using Round-Up farmers would move to other, more toxic herbicides.

            I wish I could go on. This article was riddled with fallacious argument, distorted information, and withheld information. It deserves a more thorough critique. Time and space prevent me.

There are real concerns and risks in genetic engineering. There are also benefits. Rational and honest discussion is needed.

To end, I am no friend of Monsanto. In fact, I think that corporate capitalism in the broader sense is the real problem; and Monsanto has lots of company in that department.

Links to the articles by Peggy Lemaux are given in a previous post from 1/3/2013, 'GMOs'.
 
 Doug Downie holds a PhD in Entomology from UC, Davis. He has 20 years experience in research and teaching of entomology, ecology, evolution and genetics. He has never received any funding from the private sector.