contribute substantial progress in improving agriculture, in parallel to the (usually slow) changes at
the sociopolitical level," says a 2003 Nuffield Council on Bioethics report titled "The use of
genetically modified crops in developing countries: A follow-up discussion paper." "There is an
ethical obligation to explore these potential benefits responsibly, in order to contribute to the
reduction of poverty, and to improve food security and profitable agriculture in developing
countries."
How Genetically Modified Crops Benefit Crop Growth
As demonstrated by GMO-pioneer Norman Borlaug ("Norman Borlaug," The Nobel Foundation,
Nobelprize.org), crops can be modified to facilitate their growth in less-than-ideal circumstances. A
particular concern among small-scale farmers in developing countries, but also among large-scale
farmers, is the loss of crops to insect pests. One way to combat this problem is to drench fields with
pesticides, but this behavior can have negative health effects on farmers, the environment, and the
health of consumers.
Instead, biotechnology can be used to increase yields via pest-resistant crops, according to Matin
Qaim and David Zilberman's 2003 paper "Yield effects of genetically modified crops in developing
countries" in the journal Science. For example, in Africa (and Kenya, particularly), the sweet potato
serves as an important subsistence crop, but viruses and weevils can dramatically decrease output
by up to 80%. The Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, however, has developed a genetically
modified sweet potato that can increase crop yields by 18-25%.
Biotechnology can also generate crops with genes that resist damage due to unexpected frost and
long periods of drought. These GM crops will allow more food to be produced per plot of land, and in
regions that suffer from a lack of arable land, these crops will provide food where there once was
not.
Economic Benefits of Genetically Modified Crops
Use of genetically altered foods can have a positive effect on the economy, especially in less
developed countries. Already, implementation of GM crops has led to economic gains in South
Africa, according to the 2006 Journal of Development Studies article "The economic impact of
genetically modified cotton on South African smallholders" by Richard Bennett, Stephen Morse, and
Yousouf Ismael.
The GM sweet potatoes mentioned earlier have been predicted to increase farmer income by up to
30% for virus-resistant potatoes and up to 40% for weevil-resistant potatoes. Because GM crops
require fewer pesticides, farmers can save money on both the costs of pesticides and on the labor
necessary environmental education act to administer the treatments. This, combined with higher
output, allow the farmer to profit more from his or her product.
How Genetically Modified Plants Benefit the Environment
While GM crops' reduced reliance on pesticides has shown both agricultural and economic benefits,
it also has environmental benefits. The United States Department of Agriculture reports in the 2000
document "Genetically engineered crops: Has adoption reduced pesticide use?" that from 1997 to
1998, farmers used 8.2 million fewer pounds of active pesticide ingredients on corn, cotton, and
soybeans. This reduction corresponded with an increasing adoption of GM crops, marking the
potential for this technology to reduce pest-control chemicals released into the environment. In fact,
while not necessarily related to food-related biotechnology, some GM plants have been developed to