In News
- Recently, Some activists approached the Supreme Court to ban Genetically-Modified (GM) food crops — Dhara Mustard Hybrid-11 (DMH-11) for various reasons.
About Genetically Modified Crops
- A Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) is any living organism whose genetic material has been modified to include certain desirable techniques.
- Genetic modification has previously been used for the large-scale production of insulin, vaccines, and more
- In crops, genetic modification involves the manipulation of DNA instead of using controlled pollination— the conventional method to improve crops— to alter certain characteristics of the crop.
Advantages :
Disadvantages
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Widely grown GM crops around the world
- Soyabean, maize, cotton, and canola with herbicide tolerance and insect resistance are the most widely grown GM crops around the world.
- Other common genetically modified characteristics include virus resistance, drought resistance, and fruit and tuber quality.
- GM crops have spread around the world since 1996. More than 70 countries have accepted the use of GM crops.
GM crops in India
- Indian farmers started cultivating Bt cotton, a pest-resistant, genetically modified version of cotton, in 2002-03.
- Bt modification is a type of genetic modification where the Bt gene obtained from the soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis is introduced into the target crop – in this case, cotton.
- Bt cotton is resistant to bollworm, a pest that destroys cotton plants.
- Bt modification is a type of genetic modification where the Bt gene obtained from the soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis is introduced into the target crop – in this case, cotton.
- By 2014, around 96% of the area under cotton cultivation in India was Bt cotton, making India the fourth-largest cultivator of GM crops by acreage and the second largest producer of cotton.
- More important are the gains to cotton farmers whose incomes increased significantly.
Latest Developments
- Dhara Mustard Hybrid (DMH -11) was developed by a team of scientists at Delhi University under a government-funded project.
- It uses a system of genes from soil bacterium that makes mustard — generally a self-pollinating plant — better suited to hybridisation than current methods.
- The Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC), India’s apex regulator of genetically modified plants and food products, has approved the environmental release of Dhara Mustard Hybrid-11 (DMH-11), a genetically-engineered variant of mustard.
- If approved for commercial cultivation it would be the first genetically modified food crop available to Indian farmers.
The response from farmers’ associations
- Left-wing farmers’ organisation All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) has welcomed the development related to GM mustard. General Secretary Hannan Mollah, however, said the control of the technology should remain with the governments and the public sector and extensive testing of the hybrid seed must be done by ICAR.
- However, Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh’s (RSS) farmer body Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS) opposed the move.
Regulatory framework in India
- Strict regulations are in place to control threats to animal health, human safety, and biodiversity at large during the processes of development, cultivation and transboundary movement of GM crops.
- Acts and rules that regulate GM crops in India include:
- Environment Protection Act, 1986 (EPA)
- Biological Diversity Act, 2002
- Plant Quarantine Order, 2003
- GM policy under Foreign Trade Policy
- Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006
- Drugs and Cosmetics Rule (8th Amendment), 1988
Conclusion and Way Forward
- The success of Bt cotton holds many lessons for policymakers and the field trials of GM mustard at different locations showed 25-28 per cent higher yield and better disease resistance compared to indigenous varieties.
- This can go a long way in augmenting domestic mustard oil supplies and farmers’ incomes.
- It was expected that India would be at the forefront of the gene revolution and emerge as a major export hub to other Asian and African countries.
- Dissent is a good sign in any democratic society and forms an essential part of checks and balances.
- But once the safety tests are done and the scientific body (GEAC) has given the green signal, what is needed is political leadership to keep the decision-making science-based.
Mains Practice Question [Q]What are Genetically Modified Crops ? and List out the advantages and disadvantages of the Genetically Modified Crops. |
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