Mexico Farmers Quietly Plant Banned GM Corn
MEXICO: March 10, 2008
EJIDO BENITO JUAREZ, Mexico - In the dry state of Chihuahua, south of the
Texas border, 68-year-old Amado Trevizo became an accidental outlaw last
year when his son planted 10 sacks of seeds of GM corn, banned in Mexico.
Trevizo was left with the 10-hectare (25-acre) harvest when his son was
killed in a car accident, making him the unwitting owner of a technically
illegal crop.
That fact aside, Trevizo is delighted with his harvest.
"The other corn stalks were completely eaten by worms, but on those ones the
worms only took a little bite and then fell off," said Trevizo. With
genetically modified, or GM, corn he also saved money by using less water
and pesticides.
GMO foods, whose DNA is altered to be resistant to pests, are pushed by
supporters as a way to boost world food supplies, but opponents question
their safety. In Europe consumers dub them "Frankenstein" foods.
The debate over GMOs is now dividing the Mexican countryside, known as the
birthplace of corn, which was first grown in the region thousands of years
ago.
Some farmers in the arid northern flatlands are planting banned GMO corn to
boost productivity. But farmers in the south fear stray GMO pollen will ruin
native corn varieties, and environmentalists also decry any entry of GMOs
into Mexico.
The seeds are smuggled across the border from the United States, the world's
largest corn producer. More than 70 percent of US corn is genetically
modified.
Armando Villareal, a Chihuahua farmer and GMO advocate, estimates there
could be as many as 9,000 hectares of transgenic corn scattered throughout
the state, although most growers will not admit they are experimenting with
the seeds.
The state grows more than 100,000 hectares of mostly yellow corn, used
primarily for animal feed. Most of the corn grown in Mexico is the white
variety used to make tortillas, the country's staple food.
In December 2004, Mexico's Congress passed a law to allow the experimental
planting of GMO strains in certain controlled areas, but implementing the
law has been put off until the government can agree on how to regulate the
plantings.
Because of the legal limbo, no one has been prosecuted to date for growing
the crops.
Meanwhile, some producers are becoming impatient.
"We have to start taking advantage of all the scientific tools available if
we want to increase productivity," Emilio Gonzalez, the governor of Jalisco,
a corn-growing state on Mexico's western coast, told a recent event in
Mexico City.
SACRED CORN
Other farmers want the law scrapped altogether.
Corn was first planted in Mexico as many as 9,000 years ago and the country
is now home to more than 10,000 varieties. The grain was adopted by Spanish
conquerors in the early 1500s and eventually spread to the rest of the
world.
GMO pollen can be carried for miles by the wind, and opponents fear GM corn
will cross-pollinate with native species in Mexico and alter their genetic
content.
"We don't accept genetically modified seeds, we don't plant them and we
don't want them here," said Ulises Ruiz, governor of the southern state of
Oaxaca, speaking at the same event as Gonzalez. Indigenous communities in
Oaxaca still harvest small plots by hand and till rich soil with horse
plows.
The ancient Maya, who built soaring pyramids in Mexico's southern jungles,
believed the gods made men from maize.
"For indigenous people corn is sacred, it has another value that means more
than just weight and price," said Felipe Zeferino, a farmer who works with
Popoluca and Nahuatl corn growers in the south-eastern state of Veracruz.
Corn is also cherished as a snack. Street vendors across Mexico sell roasted
corn-on-the-cob, often smeared with mayonnaise and grated cheese.
Roger Elmore, a corn expert at Iowa State University, said there was no
scientific evidence that GM corn is harmful.
That is also the position of Villareal, who says GMOs should not be feared
but instead should be widely adopted, otherwise Mexican farmers will not be
able to compete.
On Jan. 1 Mexico, the United States and Canada lifted all corn tariffs under
the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement. Mexico now imports between 8
million and 9 million tonnes of US yellow corn a year, close to 35 percent
of local consumption.
But with US corn prices hitting record highs near $6 a bushel on increased
demand for corn-based ethanol, Villareal says GMOs will help Mexicans cut
down on expensive US imports by producing more at home.
"If we apply biotechnology in Mexico, over the next four years we could
reduce imports by 85 or 90 percent," he said.
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
Story by Mica Rosenberg
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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