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Skeptics will not likely be convinced by the two new reports
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Two
new reports on genetically modified crops paint a convincing picture of their
relevance to the needs of the developing world. But neither is likely, on its
own, to convince the skeptics.
If
politics was a rational process, in which emotion, subjective judgment and
ideological commitment were consistently laid aside in the interests of
knowledge-based decision-making, then it is highly unlikely that the debate over
genetically modified (GM) crops would have taken on its present intensity. Each side
of the debate would have recognized that both dangers and uncertainties exist.
But each side would also be forced to acknowledge that what is known (as
opposed to just surmised) about these dangers and uncertainties is substantially
less weighty than what is known about their potential benefits.
In
such circumstances, doubters of the technology might well be persuaded by two
reports that appeared virtually simultaneously last week. One, prepared by
Gabrielle Persley of The Doyle Foundation for the International Council for
Science (ICSU), provides a valuable overview of what is accepted by the
scientific community, what remains in dispute, and where gaps in knowledge
continue to exist; in a rational world, this should be sufficient to decide what
practices should and should not be allowed, and under what regulatory conditions
(see GM
crops 'could reduce poverty').
The
second – still in draft form – was published by the Nuffield Council on
Bioethics, Britain’s equivalent to a national ethics committee. This
essentially revisits – and confirms – the conclusion of an earlier report by
the same body, published four years ago, that there is a “moral imperative”
for making GM crops readily available to those in developing countries who want
them. As with the ICSU report, Nuffield’s balanced conclusions provide little
support for those many groups in both the developed and developing world
demanding, if not an outright ban, at least a moratorium on the development of
GM crops until more is known about their impacts on both human health and the
natural environment.
So
why is neither report likely to have the impact that it deserves? The short
answer is to remember that while science, in the words of the late immunologist
Peter Medawar, can be characterized as “the art of the soluble”, politics
will always be what an earlier British politician described as “the art of the
possible” – in other words, an activity whose limits are defined by what
might be true, not what is likely to be true. The longer response is that the
worldwide dispute over GM crops has become a symbolic battleground for a wide
range of contemporary disputes, from the privatization of scientific
knowledge to the marketing practices of global corporations. Each issue embodies
beliefs and commitments that cannot be neatly packaged into either scientific or
cost-benefit arguments.
No
Meeting of Minds
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The worldwide dispute over GM crops has become a symbolic battleground for a wide range of contemporary disputes
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Take,
for example, the arguments used in a report produced the previous week by the
international development organization, ActionAid, under the eye-catching title
‘GM Crops – Going Against the Grain’ (compare that to Nuffield’s earnest
‘The Use of Genetically Modified Crops in Developing Countries’). The press
release announcing the report – which claims to take "a balanced look at
the impact of GM crops in developing countries” – carries the unequivocal
headline ‘No evidence that GM will help solve world hunger’. The report
comes up with the conclusions that such crops “are at best irrelevant to poor
farmers”, and that “rather than alleviating world hunger, the new technology
is likely to exacerbate food insecurity, leading to more hungry people, not
less”. (See GM
crops 'will not solve world hunger')
It
would be relatively easy to take the authors of this report to task for its
quick-fire conclusions. These are taken, not from any systematic study of the
issues, but primarily from anecdotal evidence and press reports, where evidence
that supports their conclusions is given a heavy weighting, and evidence that
appears to contradict it, is downplayed, if not ignored. For the Nuffield
working party, for example, the fact that GM seeds are currently better suited
to large- rather than small-scale farmers is a reason to demand more research
into how they could meet the needs of the latter; for ActionAid, it is quoted as
a reason “why GM crops will not feed the world”.
Clearly
the ActionAid report is not based on evidence and arguments that could be
described as scientific. Equally clearly, however, its conclusions are more
likely to resonate with those who would wish, for whatever reason (personal,
political or otherwise), to see such conclusions emerge. It is no accident, for
example, that that GM issue has become a key focus of anti-globalization
campaigns. For it neatly encapsulates many of the concerns – both conscious
and unconscious – that form the core of such campaigns.
Loosening
the Boundaries of Debate
There
is no easy path through this quagmire, even if some elements of such a path are
beginning to emerge. The British government, for example, is currently
experimenting with a nationwide “public debate”, being conducted primarily
through a series of regional public meetings at which scientists,
environmentalists, business representatives and others are being asked to state
their case. Elsewhere (for example in India and parts of Africa), there is talk
of developing political ‘frameworks’ that will promote and regulate GM
technology simultaneously, using more sophisticated political mechanisms than
have been applied so far.
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While science is the art of the soluble, politics will always be the art of the possible.
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Part
of the task is undoubtedly to ensure that those (such as the authors of the
ActionAid report) accept the need to locate their arguments within the realm of
what is likely, rather than what is possible. This is the strength of both the
ICSU and the Nuffield reports. The first of these, for example, is realistic
enough to acknowledge potential problems arising from the use of GM crops that
have not been given sufficient attention, such as whether their use can be
integrated safely with pest management systems. “This is an area requiring
further action,” it states.
But
there is a comparable need for those arguing the case for GM crops primarily on
scientific grounds to be equally realistic about the non-scientific issues that
arise. Neither the Nuffield nor the ICSU reports, for example, spend much time
discussing the implications of the way in which the intellectual property system
helps to increase the control of developing-country agriculture by multinational
corporations – one of the key planks in the critics’ case. Neither do they
address the belief systems that underlie much of the current condemnation of GM
foods as “unnatural”.
It
may be tempting to dismiss such arguments as “unscientific”; doing so,
however, risks not only losing sight of issues that lie at the heart of the
current debates, but also undermining their ultimate effectiveness.
Link
to full report GM Crops – Going Against the Grain (PDF)
Link
to draft Nuffield Council report The Use of Genetically Modified Crops in
Developing Countries
Link to ICSU report New Genetics, Food and Agriculture: Scientific Discoveries – Societal Dilemmas
**
This
article was reprinted with the permission of www.scidev.net.
You can find the original article here.
David Dickson is
director of the Science and Development Network (SciDev.Net), and
acts as editor of the website. He was news editor of ‘Nature’
from 1993 to August 2001, and the journal’s Washington
correspondent from 1977 to 1982. Originally a graduate in
mathematics, he has also worked for ‘The Times Higher Education
Supplement’ (1973-1977), ‘Science’ (1982-1989) and
‘New Scientist’ (1989-1992). He may be contacted at: editor@scidev.net.
