Farmers that produce with
organic or conventional techniques free of Trans- genetics in Argentina confront, starting
from the current crop, a serious problem: a high percentage of its grains cannot certify
the norms demanded by the European Union.
In consequence, those lots
will be sold at substantially inferior prices in those markets that don't put barriers to
Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO). In that way, efforts and investments dedicated to
differentiate their production to obtain bigger benefits will be wasted.
We have to look at the seeds
for the cause. The graduated Patricia García asserts, directress of Letis INC, a
certificadora of organic products recognized by the Senasa.
García explains that
"the Europeans admit an accidental contamination of OGM of one percent for the
traditional production, and of 0,1 percent for the organic one, but in the Argentina the
farmers that want to enter in these markets don't get seeds" that assure this
standards.
It is that the big seed
providers, at the present time, guarantees their supply by 95 percent, and in many cases
only by 90 percent. In other words, the probability that the seed is polluted it ascends
at the 10 or 15 percent.
And when the certificadoras
carries out in port the analyses PCR (*1), a high percentage of the samples gives superior
values of contamination to one percent.
The directress of Letis
points to the seeds and she argues him: "These producers work with organic systems
for many years, they have the care of cleaning the machinery and they assume-low sworn
declaration-the responsibility of the cleaning in everything that makes to the transport
and handling of the soya. If all these cares the contamination gives high, we have to
deduce that there was a problem in the seed."
The specialist remembers that
the last year 90 percent of the surface Argentinean soy producers was sowed with soya RR
(*2), and this fact makes that the seed providers cannot provide the matter it prevails to
assure a crop of organic cereal.
Losses
The figures of the current
crop are not still known. Nevertheless, if a similar production is calculated at the 2000
for the soya, and one keeps in mind, also, the contamination for pollination of the corn,
the losses for the organic farmers will be very serious.
García advances another
difficulty: "Next year, the farmer that wants to make organic production will have to
make the analyses PCR-that are very expensive-to the seeds, besides being made it to the
result of the crop."
The circumstance is increased
if one keeps in mind that every time there is but countries that reject the import and
still the sowing of products Trans- genetics. And it only is not the developed nations.
These decisions also apply it several Asian and African countries.
García gives an example:
Indonesia has stopped an Argentinean shipment of corn, of the last crop, to contain Bt
(*3).
Absence of
regulations
The directress of Letis
points out that "in Argentina, the biotechnology companies have given great diffusion
to the benefits of the sowing of products Trans- genetics, but nobody has told to the
farmer that won't be able to sell her product I save to those countries where the problem
of the hunger is bigger to the preservation of the inherent risks to this type of
technologies."
The complete graduate that
the Government loads with a high quota of responsibility, because "with his silence
it contributed to this lack of information."
The Argentinean legislation
doesn't force the farmer that sowing Trans- genetics to prevent the contamination. It is
more, they are the own biotechnology companies those that recommend to protect the sowing
OGM.
García points that, on the
contrary, in United States-where a strong pressure exists for the use of OGM-the
implementation of an area buffer is demanded (of security) that protects the surfaces
worked with technical organic. In the case of the corn-it specifies-this receipt fringe
should be of 300 meters.
But in Argentina it is the
other way around: the producer that organic sowing is who has to leave the protection
area, with the costs that it implies it.
References
(1) reaction in Chain of the
Polimerasa, for their initials in English. It is the most reliable method and I specify to
recognize the presence of organisms OGM.
(2) I seed resistant to the
herbicides glifosatos, commercially well-known as Round Up®, Liberty®, or Basta®. The
soya RR was enabled in the Argentina in 1966.
(3) the corns Bt possesses a
transgén that is a modification of a gene natural present in the bacteria of the floor
Bacillus thuringiensis that is used for the biological control of plagues