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Monsanto's Fall: The End of GMO Seed Industry?
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By TOM PHILLPOTT (GRIST)
Conspiracy Planet
Tuesday, Nov 9, 2010
I got
caught up in a cyclone of travel, meetings, and speechifying the last
two weeks, so I'm a bit behind on the latest news in the food world. But
I did take note of Andrew Pollack's Oct. 4 New York Times story on the
recent plight of genetically modified (GM) seed giant Monsanto,
long-time Wall Street darling and bete noire of the sustainable food
movement.
Pollack summed up Monsanto's woes like this:
As recently as late December, Monsanto was named "company of the year" by Forbes magazine. Last week, the company earned a different accolade from Jim Cramer, the television stock market commentator. "This may be the worst stock of 2010," he proclaimed.
On
Tuesday, Forbes publicly lamented its decision to deem Monsanto
"company of the year." The headline was cutting: "Forbes was wrong about
Monsanto. Really wrong." How did Monsanto go from Wall Street hero to
Wall Street doormat?
According to The Times' Pollack, Monsanto's troubles are two-fold: 1) the patent on Roundup, Monsanto's market-dominating herbicide, has run out, exposing the company
to competition from cheap Chinese imports; and 2) its target audience
-- large-scale commodity farmers in the south and Midwest-- are turning
against its core offerings in genetically modified corn, soy, and cotton
seed traits.
I
agree with Pollack's diagnosis, but I want to add a third and even more
fundamental problem to the mix: Monsanto's once-celebrated product
pipeline is looking empty. As I'll show below, its current whiz-bang
seeds offer just tarted-up versions of the same old traits it has been
peddling for more than a decade: herbicide tolerance and pest resistance. Meanwhile, judging from the company's recent report on its latest quarterly earnings, the "blockbuster"
traits it has been promising for years -- drought resistance and
nitrogen-use efficiency -- don't seem to be coming along very well.
Why do I say that? In my days as a reporter covering the stock market,
I read a lot of company financial reports. When a high-tech company
like Monsanto disappointed Wall Street analysts with its financial performance,
it would strain to draw attention to "next-generation" products that
promised huge future returns to investors. But in its report on its
disappointing quarter last week, Monsanto did no such thing. It gave
zero details about next-generation seeds, and instead focused on its "revamped pricing approach."
Translated,
that means that after years of constantly jacking up prices, the
company is being forced to slash them to keep farmers interested. The
loss of pricing clout is devastating for a high-tech company like
Monsanto.
What gives? Why is the company that once ruled the Big Ag universe like Darth Vader now whimpering like a mouse?
Stuck in the mud
As
Pollack delicately puts it, Monsanto "has been buffeted by setbacks
this year." The most famous one is the rise of Roundup-resistant
"superweeds," first in the south and then in the Corn Belt, that has
forced thousands of farmers to reconsider the merits of Monsanto's flagship Roundup Ready crop varieties.
Monsanto's
response has been to roll out its much-ballyhooed SmartStax corn seed,
"stacked" with a mind-boggling eight foreign genes. Colluding with its
arch-rival Dow AgroSciences - whatever happened to antitrust, again? -
Monsanto loaded the new wonder-seed with multiple varieties of the toxic
gene from Bt, a naturally occurring bacteria that had been used as a pesticide
for years before Monsanto came along. Each of the Bt varieties in
SmartStax targets a specific insect. To address the problem of
Roundup-resistant "superweeds," the SmartStax seed combines Monsanto's
Roundup Ready trait with Dow's trait for resistance to its own
proprietary herbicide, Liberty. Now corn farmers can douse their fields freely with not one but two broad-spectrum herbicides!
In a press release heralding the advent
of SmartStax when it was still in development back in 2007, a Monsanto
exec expressed the company's hopes and dreams for the new product:
"By bringing together the two companies that have developed and commercialized the trait technologies widely used in agriculture
today, we can provide farmers an 'all-in-one' answer to demands for
comprehensive yield protection from weed and insect threats," said Carl
Casale, executive vice president of strategy and operations for Monsanto. "Farmers will have more product choices to optimize performance
and protection, and that translates into a higher-yielding opportunity
and a new growth proposition for their businesses and ours."
But as I say above, SmartStax is just a mashup of various forms of the only two traits Monsanto has ever brought to market: herbicide tolerance and Bt toxicity.
And unfortunately for Monsanto and its once fat-and-happy shareholders,
SmartStax corn is starting to look, well, not so smart. According to
The Times' Pollack, early data from this year's corn harvest suggest
that SmartStax is "providing yields no higher than the company's less
expensive corn, which contains only three foreign genes." As a result,
the company is having to slash prices on both SmartStax and its new
soybean seed, cleverly called Roundup Ready 2 Yield. Oops.
The evident failure of SmartStax to deliver yield gains may be the straw that crushes Monsanto's long-time claim
that its products offer farmers dramatically higher yields than do
conventional seeds. In a 2009 paper called "Failure to Yield," Doug
Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists,
showed that since their public debut in 1996, GM traits have actually
provided, at best, marginal yield gains - and in fact in some cases have
caused yields to decrease.
So why is Monsanto merely rearranging and stacking up last year's traits, and not rolling out new ones?
Tough row to hoe
Here's
what I think, from years of listening to industry critics like
Gurian-Sherman and the Center for Food Safety's Andrew Kimbrell:
It is one thing to splice a particular trait like herbicide or pesticide
resistance into the corn genome. You isolate the gene in an organism
like Bt that kills insects, splice it into the corn genome, and watch it
express itself.
But transforming a crop's way of taking up
water and fertilizer - the goal of engineering crops that can withstand
drought and use nitrogen more efficiently - is infinitely more complex.
These intricate processes developed through millions of years of
evolution. They don't involve a single gene, but rather groups of genes
interacting in ways that are little understood. And as the Union of
Concerned Scientists' Gurian-Sherman told me in an interview, in the
process of achieving a complex trait like drought resistance, breeders
often generate unintended traits, such as susceptibility to disease.
These are known as "pleiotropic effects" - simply the idea that changing
one aspect of a thing can create multiple, unpredictable effects.
Pleiotropy is the scourge of GMO breeders looking to create the next generation of miracle transgenic seeds.
In
his 2009 paper No Sure Fix [PDF], Gurian-Sherman shows that attempts to
create nitrogen-efficient GM seeds that actually work well in the field
have so far failed - and that conventional breeders have actually
managed to generate significant gains in nitrogen-use efficiency in the
field without resorting to transgenic methods.
In his Times piece,
Andrew Pollack reports that Monsanto "hopes" to introduce another
complex trait, drought-tolerance in corn, sometime in 2012. My
experience as a business
reporter tells me that if Monsanto execs were confident in their
ability to do so, they would have trumpeted it in their dismal recent
quarterly report.
From my perspective, what we're seeing is signs
that GMO technology is much cruder and less effective than its
champions have let on. After decades of hype and billions of dollars
worth of research, much of it publicly funded, the industry has managed
to market exactly two traits. More devastating still, it has failed on
its own terms: it has not delivered the promised dazzling yield gains.
As
Monsanto execs scramble to win back their mojo with Wall Street
investors - the lot that brought us the dot-com and housing busts in the
past decade alone - the rest of us would do well to remember that the
surest path to a bountiful future lies in supporting biodiversity, not
in narrowing it away by handing the globe's seed heritage to a few
bumbling companies.
See more about Monsanto on GRIST
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