Agricultural News
British Report Shows Huge Benefits from Biotech Crops
Thu, 14 Apr 2011 11:04:10 CDT
Agricultural biotechnology continues to provide important economic and environmental benefits and is making positive contributions to global food production and food security, according to the latest annual update report of global biotech crop impacts prepared by UK-based PG Economics.
"As the report points out, biotech crops help increase agricultural productivity while reducing on-farm fuel use and greenhouse gas emissions and lessening the need for insecticides and pesticides,"says Sharon Bomer Lauritsen, executive vice president for food and agriculture for the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO).
"In addition, farmers especially those in developing countries are seeing the economic benefit from biotechnology thanks to increased crop yields and reduced production costs. This is especially significant at a time when food availability is becoming more of an issue around the world."
The PG Economics annual Global Impact Study quantifies the impact of agricultural biotechnology on the environment and on farmer incomes since biotech's commercialization in 1996. Among the key findings:
Biotech crops have contributed to significantly reducing the amount of greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural practices. This results from less fuel use and additional soil carbon storage from reduced tillage with biotech crops. In 2009, this was equivalent to removing 17.7 billion kg of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or equal to removing 7.8 million cars from the road for one year.
Biotech crops have reduced pesticide spraying (1996-2009) by 393 million kg (-8.7 percent). As a result, the environmental impact associated withherbicide and insecticide use on the area planted with biotech crops decreased by 17.1 percent.
Farmers who grow biotech crops have seen substantial net economic benefits at the farm level amounting to $10.8 billion in 2009 and $64.7 billion for the fourteen year period.
Of the total farm income benefit, 57 percent ($36.6 billion) has been due to yield gains, with the balance arising from reductions in the cost of production.
Since 1996, biotech traits have added 83.5 million tonnes and 130.5 million tonnes respectively to global production of soybeans and corn. The technology has also contributed an extra 10.5 million tonnes of cotton lint and 5.5 million tonnes of canola.
Click here to view the full report from PG Economics.
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