RAFI
Rural Advancement Foundation International
www.rafi.org rafi@rafi.org
News Release - 3 August 2001
USDA Says Yes to Terminator
It's official. The US Department of Agriculture announced this week that it
has concluded negotiations to license the notorious Terminator technology to
its seed industry partner, Delta & Pine Land (D&PL). As a result of
joint research, the USDA and D&PL are co-owners of three patents on the
controversial technology that genetically modifies plants to produce sterile
seeds, preventing farmers from re-using harvested seed. A licensing agreement
establishes the terms and conditions under which a party can use a patented
technology. Although many of the Gene Giants hold patents on Terminator technology,
D&PL is the only company that has publicly declared its intention to commercialize
Terminator seeds. (for details, see '2001: A Seed Odyssey' RAFI Communique,
January/February 2001, www.rafi.org)
'USDA's decision to license Terminator flies in the face of international public
opinion and betrays the public trust,' said Hope Shand, Research Director of
RAFI. 'Terminator technology has been universally condemned by civil society;
banned by international agricultural research institutes, censured by United
Nations bodies, even shunned by Monsanto, and yet the US government has officially
sanctioned commercialization of the technology by licensing it to one of the
world's largest seed companies,' explains Shand.
'USDA's role in developing Terminator seeds is a disgraceful example of corporate
welfare involving a technology that is bad for farmers, dangerous for the environment
and disastrous for world food security,' adds Silvia Ribeiro of RAFI. Terminator
has been universally opposed as an immoral technology because over 1.4 billion
people, primarily poor farmers, depend on farm-saved seeds as their primary
seed source.
Michael Schechtman, Executive Secretary to USDA's Advisory Committee on Agricultural
Biotechnology, made the official announcement regarding the licensing of Terminator
at the Committee's August 1 meeting. The 38-member Advisory Committee, established
during the Clinton administration, was created to advise the Secretary of Agriculture
on issues related to growing public controversy over GM technology. Because
of overwhelming public opposition to USDA's involvement with Terminator, the
issue became a top priority for the Advisory Committee. USDA officials admitted
last year that the Agency had the option of abandoning patents on Terminator,
but chose not to do so. Although many members of the Biotech Advisory Committee
urged the USDA to abandon its patents and forsake all further research on genetic
seed sterilization, the USDA steadfastly declined. The official statement released
by USDA this week states that the Agency 'had a legal obligation' to license
the technology to D&PL.
In a lackluster attempt to quell its critics, the USDA pledged to negotiate
licensing restrictions on how the Terminator technology could be deployed by
Delta & Pine Land. 'In the end, the restrictions negotiated by USDA are
meaningless,' concludes Michael Sligh, RAFI-USA's Director of Sustainable Agriculture,
and member of the Biotech Advisory Committee. According to Sligh, 'USDA's promotion
of Terminator technology puts private profits above public good and the rights
of farmers everywhere.' Sligh spearheaded efforts amongst Advisory Board members
who urged the USDA to abandon Terminator.
USDA places the following conditions on D&PL's deployment of Terminator:
_ The licensed Terminator technology will not be used in any heirloom varieties
of garden flowers and vegetables and it will not be used in any variety of plant
available in the marketplace before January 1, 2003. (RAFI's comment: In other
words, Terminator will not be commercialized, at the earliest, until 2003 -
only 17 months from now. To suggest that USDA is protecting heirloom varieties
from genetic seed sterilization technology is ludicrous. There's no money to
be made on genetic modification of heirloom vegetables and flowers. The seed
industry aims to engineer seed sterility in major crop commodities - especially
those crops that have not been successfully hybridized on a commercial scale
such as soybeans, rice and wheat.)
_ USDA scientists will be involved in safety testing of new varieties incorporating
the GM trait for seed sterility, and a full and public process of safety evaluation
must be completed prior to regulatory sign-off by USDA.(RAFI's comment: Can
USDA play a role in both developing and regulating this technology? Is it a
blatant conflict of interest for the agency to conduct a biosafety review of
a product in which it holds a financial interest?)
_ All royalties accruing to USDA from the use of Terminator will be earmarked
to technology transfer efforts for USDA's Agricultural Research Service innovations
that will be made widely available to the public. (RAFI's comment: 'Technology
transfer' is a very broad concept. Terminator seeds in every foreign aid package?
More paper clips for ARS patent lawyers?)
USDA concludes that Terminator 'is a valuable technology.' Ironically, the agency
promotes Terminator as a 'green' technology that will prevent gene flow from
transgenic plants.
'We reject the notion that Terminator is a biosafety bandage for GM crops with
leaky genes, but even if it were, biosafety at the expense of food security
is unacceptable,' concludes RAFI's Silvia Ribeiro.
Last year the FAO's Panel of Eminent Experts on Ethics in Food and Agriculture
concluded that Terminator seeds are unethical. When heads of state meet at FAO's
World Food Summit Five Years Later in Rome, 9-15 November, they will have the
opportunity to re-affirm that finding, and recommend that member nations ban
the technology. In keeping with its image as a rogue, isolationist state in
international treaty negotiations on global warming and biological weapons,
the US also appears to stand alone on Terminator.
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Delta & Pine Land (Mississippi, USA) is the world's 9th largest seed corporation,
with revenues of $301 million in 2000. The company has joint ventures and/or
subsidiaries in North America, Brazil, Argentina, China, Mexico, Paraguay, South
Africa, Australia, and China.
RAFI is an international civil society organization based in Canada. We are
dedicated to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and to the
socially responsible development of technologies useful to rural societies.
For further information on this news release:
Hope Shand, RAFI: hope@rafi.org 919 960-5223
Michael Sligh, RAFI-USA (member of USDA's Ag Biotech Advisory Committee), msligh@rafiusa.org
(919) 542-1396