Monday, August 15, 2016

15th August,2016 daily global,regional and local rice e-newsletter by riceplus magazine



Averting the basmati rice production decline in Pakistan

By Webmaster -

Dr. Riaz A. Mann
BASMATI rice is treasured around the world for its blessed characteristics of long slender grains that elongate twice of their original size with fluffy texture upon cooking, delicious taste, superior aroma (due to predominantly presence of a chemical, 2-acetyl-1-pyrroline) and unique flavor. The distinctive qualities are due to a complex combination of factors including its inherent genetic characteristics, the environmental conditions specific to the soil, climate and the growing practices that farmers developed over the centuries. Consequently, there has been limited success to cultivate basmati rice outside the Sub continent because of varying geographically-specific conditions. Fortunately, the “Kalar Tract”-the area between two rivers- Chenab and Sutluj is known as the native area of the basmati rice.

Over the last several years, basmati rice acreage and its production has continuously been declining. For instance, during 2008-09, the basmati crop was cultivated on 4.19 million acres (mac). In the following year-2009-10, area was declined to 3.80 mac and again, in the following year 2010-11, the area was reduced to 3.48 mac. Last year, 2015-16, basmati was only cultivated on 3.11 mac-almost 26% decline over the area during 2008-09. This decline shows a lack of farmers’ interest and can be attributed to several factors. The growers have to bear a negative return due to low basmati paddy yield; high cost of production and low prices. The Federal government did not fulfill its promise for compensation package of Rs. 5,000 per acre, and the farmers have been left alone to suffer the brunt, both of a reduction in yields and price.

Where would this decline stop? With basmati on a decline, would Pakistan be able to sustain its rice export? Most probably it would not.“Super basmati rice variety”, being the most sought after variety in the Basmati Group, was released about two decades back in 1996 and is still popular among the farmers, consumers, and traders or exporters. Although, two more basmati varieties namely “Basmati 2000” and “basmati 515” were released during 2001 and 2011, respectively but, both the varieties could not beat or completely replace the “Super Basmati” variety in the field. The average paddy yield at farm level is much lower than its potential yield. The key issues are low plant density, labour shortage, water scarcity, and pests and diseases. Conventional method of manually rice transplanting, unbalanced use of fertilizers, Continuous practicing of cereal-cereal cropping system, use of old harvesters designed for wheat, and lack of storage facilities further add up to the problems.

Thus, high cost of basmati production combined with low paddy prices has compelled the growers to shift to other short-duration, high-yielding non-basmati varieties such as Pusa 1121 (Indian variety), and 386. Both the varieties were banned and their cultivation was illegal, few years back. Recently, Pusa 1121 (formerly known as “Kainaat) and 386 have been approved by the Punjab Agriculture Department with the names of PS-II and 386. Both the varieties provide an opportunity for either growing a third crop (such as green peas) or sufficient turnaround period for land preparation and timely sowing of wheat crop. PS-II variety, due to extra-long kernel, is popularly used as parboil rice. On the other hands, maturity of the basmati varieties coincides with optimum wheat sowing period, hence causing delayed wheat sowing and declined wheat yield. It means farmers have to suffer multiple consequences, if they opt to grow basmati rice varieties.

Furthermore, the basmati varieties are highly susceptible to all insect pests and diseases. For the last six years, the RRI, Kala Shah Kaku in collaboration with other national institutions has been working to develop the BLB (Bacterial Leaf Blight) resistant basmati varieties but no success reported yet.The Provincial research institutions are required to revisit their priorities and focus on basmati varietal improvement and cost-effective technologies on water, labour, fertilizer and pesticides uses. The innovative resource-conserving technologies such as direct seeding of rice and alternative wetting & drying need to be scaled up. Another area requiring intervention is to bring improvement in the harvesting system of basmati rice crop. Use of old wheat-combines, without proper adjustment, results into admixture of green trash and broken grains and losses of grains up to 5-10%. Mechanical harvesting of rice crop at high moisture level, untimely and poor drying and processing of paddy cause development of mycotoxins in the rice grains.

 That is why Pakistan’s rice consignments are rejected or fetched lower prices than those offered to our competitors such as India. The question now arises, what benefit growers receive when the crop is high? The answer is nothing. The Arthies/middlemen start a waiting game for picking up the produce and force the farmers to sell at the price dictated by the market.It is necessary that the government takes crucial steps to regulate the market instead of letting it being manipulated by few players under the visage of free market forces. In 2008, the federal government tried to impose a Minimum Export Price (MEP), but within four months it had bowed to pressure from the exporters and abolished the MEP. The REAP-an official body of the Rice Exporters, blames to the government for continuously neglecting the basmati crop and demand that RRI, Kala Shah Kaku should work on basmati varietal improvement (as its major mandate), increasing the input-utilization efficiencies, and improving paddy yield and quality. But, on its part, REAP has not played its pivotal role in averting the present scenario confronting to basmati production and market system.


Public-private partnership in rice R&D is also required. We have sufficient level of know-how available within our research institutions which can be commercialized, provided a framework to reward innovation exists. The private sector may set up a special fund for capacity building of the young scientists, sending them abroad for short and long-term trainings, granting the best scientist awards, and fixing a certain quota for induction of the retired rice scientists in the rice industry. The Agricultural Extension Department has to play its role for providing technical guidance to the farmers, using modern and innovative tools such as farmers’ field schools, demo plots, and village-level trainings.—The author is a Principal Scientific Officer (PSO) and Ex-National Coordinator for Rice at Pakistan Agricultural Research Council, Islamabad

Pakistani briyani full of flavours



Peshawar Briyani House’s chicken briyani.ST PHOTO: KENNETH GOH

Aug 14, 2016, 5:00 am SGT
I have been craving briyani the past month - partly because the well-loved Bismillah Biryani shop in Dunlop Street and one-north was recognised with the Bib Gourmand award in the Michelin Singapore Guide.
The craving increased after I read a recent article by the BBC on the evolution of briyani, from its likely origins in Persia (modern-day Iran) to the different varieties in countries such as India and Bangladesh.
Then I stumble on Peshawar Briyani House, a week-old stall in Taman Jurong Food Centre, which serves a Pakistani variant of the moreish rice dish.
The stall is co-owned by Mr Ahmed Khan, 36, who is taking his Pakistan-born wife's briyani out of their home kitchen. Her family comes from Peshawar, a city in northern Pakistan that the stall is named after.


PESHAWAR BRIYANI HOUSE
           3 Yung Sheng Road, Taman Jurong Food Centre, 02-114; open: 10am to 2pm (Tuesday to Thursday), 10am to 4pm (Friday), 10am to 2pm (weekend), closed on Monday
Rating: 4/5 stars
There are at least three other stalls in the hawker centre that serve briyani, but the Pakistani version stands out because the basmati rice has a spicier kick and comes with raita (yogurt sauce) instead of achar.
Choose from two types of briyani on the menu - chicken ($5) or mutton ($6). The chicken briyani has a heap of saffron-hued rice that is perfumed by seven spices including cloves, garam masala and chilli powder, and flecked with coriander, tomato skin and onions.
The main difference lies in the chicken.
Instead of being clogged with curry, it is infused with briyani spices from being cooked in the rice and served separately from the curry.
Though not too juicy, the tender meat is a foil for the aromatic rice to shine through.
To douse the heat, I gingerly alternate each spoonful of rice with raita, which has diced onions, cucumber and cumin. The sour tanginess of the yogurt sauce is a good palate cleanser.
The rice is also cooked with meltingly soft mutton, like in a dum briyani. Each spoonful is a robust eruption of spices.
A hidden gem is the prawn briyani ($7), which is seldom served in hawker stalls. It is available on Fridays and public holidays and is not on the menu.The spice level of the rice is toned down to highlight the sweetness of the three succulent sea prawns.I usually zero in on the addictive papadum crackers first on my plate of briyani, but with such beautifully cooked rice and meat, I almost forget to pop them into my mouth.

http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/food/pakistani-briyani-full-of-flavours

How to fight hidden hunger


An effective way to address population-wide nutrient deficiency is to fortify wheat.— Photo: Reuters
Mahatma Gandhi was always advocating us to eat hand pound rice and hand ground wheat rather than eating polished rice. Yet we continue using machine-polished cereals because they can be stored longer. But machine-polishing removes the bran (surrounding the seed) containing the pericarp and the ‘aleurone layer’ which have small amounts of essential nutrients such as some vitamins, iron, zinc and other inorganic components.This leads to “hidden hunger.” You may eat stomach full every day and yet miss out on micro-nutrients, which are essential for growth. UN agencies estimate that hidden hunger affects one in every three children across the world, leading to deficiency in physical growth and development of the brain. Children missing out on vitamin A suffer from vision problems. Missing out on iron leads to blood disorders while deficiency in zinc retards growth, causes diarrhoea, hair loss, lack of appetite and other health issues.


A programme in India, started in the 1970s by Dr. Ramalingaswami of ICMR, administering large amounts (megadose) of Vitamin A every six months to children, has been found serving in helping them come out of “night blindness.” This is because a derivative of Vitamin A is essential in the retina of the eye in harvesting light and converting it into electrical signals which aid the process of vision.Dr. Maharaj Kishan Bhan, earlier Secretary of the Department of Biotechnology of the Government of India in New Delhi, has come out with a salt mixture containing some of the micronutrients including zinc and iron, to be given to children suffering from diarrhoea and dehydration. The results are strikingly positive; with micronutrient supplementation, particularly zinc, in young children with acute diarrhoea was found to be useful. Why is zinc so important to the body? This is because over 300 enzymes in our body use zinc as an essential component in their action. Zinc supports our immune system, in synthesising (and degrading) DNA, in wound healing and several other activities. And the amount of zinc we need is not very much. In a human body of, say, 70 kg, there is but 2 to 3 grams of zinc. But if the level falls down to below normal, growth is retarded, diarrhoea sets in, eye and skin lesions appear, and appetite is lost. Thus, addition of zinc in the daily diet becomes essential.

While downing tablets containing vitamins and some of these minerals is fine, this is no solution to billions of children, largely in the developing world. But what if, rather than supplementing these micro-nutrients separately, they become part and parcel of the rice, wheat and other cereals we eat daily? Are there rice or wheat plants which are inherently rich in some of these micronutrients? Can they be grown, cross-bred or hybridised with other conventional rice or wheat plants? This has been the dream of agricultural scientists across the country, and the group led by Dr Vemuri Ravindra Babu of the Institute of Rice Research (at Hyderabad has succeeded in doing so. A particular variety, termed DRR Dhan 45 (also termed IET 23832) is a zinc- rich rice plant developed by this group. It contains as much as 22.18 parts per million of zinc (the highest so far in released rice varieties) It is also moderately resistant to pests that kill rice plant by causing the leaf blast disease.
D. Balasubramanian
dbala@lvpei.org
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-sci-tech-and-agri/how-to-fight-hidden-hunger/article8987988.ece

Millions spent, no one served: Who is to blame for failure of #GMO golden rice?

Guest contributor | August 15, 2016 |
The recent Nobel laureates’ letter accusing Greenpeace of a “crime against humanity” for opposing genetically modified (GMO) golden rice reveals a deep division not only between civil societies and some science circles but also within the science community – a division in the visions for our common future and which path to take for our joint development. A division we see growing and escalating, write Angelika Hilbeck and Hans Herren.
A strong indication of this division is that among the Nobel laureate signatories, there seems to be hardly anybody with a solid scientific track record in agriculture, food production, development, or the socio-ecological and political causes of poverty and hunger. Others with notable competence – at least in the economic and social domains of development, poverty, and hunger – are not among the signatories. Signs of escalation also include the emotional, accusing language in the letter and the ample use of scientifically unsubstantiated claims. What is missing in the letter and among the supporters and developers of GMOs is the recognition and scientific analysis of some tough facts.

Fact no. 1: Still no functioning vitamin A rice despite unlimited resources

No functioning vitamin A rice has been produced in over 20 years of research. This is despite full support at every level: financial, institutional, political, and corporate. By ‘functioning’, we mean farmer’s rice varieties that reliably and stably express sufficient amounts of beta-carotene (pro-vitamin A, the precursor of Vitamin A) over many generations of seed saving. These seeds must continuously express beta-carotene at a level that has been documented to be efficiently convertible to Vitamin A in mammals and, most importantly, can (statistically) significantly relieve the symptoms of Vitamin A deficiency in hungry people. None of this is scientifically trivial but that’s what has been promised.

Rice farming
The first golden rice, GR1, was unsuccessful and is long gone. Golden rice 2 (GR2) is a patented pro-vitamin A GM rice developed from scratch by the multinational biotech firm Syngenta and still in the field trial stage at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) at least one decade after its creation.The vast majority of scientists in the world will never see such comprehensively generous support for their research – yet they still deliver, and must deliver if they ever want to renew funding for their research. This is more than can be said for the golden rice project.

Fact no. 2: Lack of recognition of real reasons for failure to deliver

A quick evidence check is sufficient to reveal the simple reason why golden rice is not in farmer’s fields: it is still not ready because it is not performing agronomically. Furthermore, it is far from being medically documented to relieve symptoms of Vitamin A deficiency. Neither Greenpeace nor the destruction of a test plot in the Philippines by local activists can be held responsible for this lack of scientific achievement.

Fact no. 3: Questionable conceptual underpinning

Leaving aside its scientific aspects, the very concept of golden rice – and all other similar conceptual approaches as solutions to malnourishment – remain doomed from the start as similar approaches have failed repeatedly. The problem lies in the underlying reductionist (disembedded) approach. Combating hunger and malnutrition one vitamin and mineral at a time is a failed ideology, no matter which vitamin or mineral one starts with and which kind of delivery system one chooses. Malnourished people do not suffer from single-vitamin-deficiencies added up. They suffer from hunger, as in ‘lack of food’. This is compounded by poverty and a myriad of contributing factors working simultaneously together. That means they lack regular access to real foods containing the necessary variety of ALL essential nutrients, which, in conjunction, make up a healthy diet.
These contributing factors differ according to culture, place and time. There exists a huge amount of research and analyses to read for anybody who cares about the real causes of hunger and the real solutions (we list some old and new references at the end – or just check out the United Nations World Food Programme website. For the golden rice project, we recommend for starters, the recent analysis by Stone and Glover who locate its failure in its ‘disembeddedness’ and ‘placelessness’.
Consequently, hunger and malnutrition with its complex, ‘place-based’ causes cannot be battled by a uniform, de-contextualized and placeless one-vitamin-at-a-time approach which is what GMO golden rice has to offer.
This reductionistic approach to hunger is matched by similar reductionism in the genetic engineering world where organisms are viewed as the sum of their genes and proteins. Genes are added one at a time as blueprint construction instructions for lego-like products and many more projects of this kind are underway, e.g. vitamin A banana and cassava, or iron-fortified cassava, or whatever lies within their technical reach. Stone and Glover describe this as “a preoccupation with the molecular scale” that “favors a form of reductionist thinking that conceives of traits of interest as being governed primarily by genetics rather than through interactions with the environment or management” (Stone and Glover 2016).
Supplying vitamin A or any other nutrient in isolation only works for a transitional period of time, curing a symptom at best, while work progresses on the underlying place-based causes of hunger – lack of access to food, money, education and secure living conditions. Under those circumstances, as in parts of the Philippines, cheap vitamin A pills do the job much better, in a more targeted, controlled, and effective way than any patented GM crop could ever do.

Fact no. 4: A missing roll-out plan

But even if the golden rice researchers do eventually manage to get some GM pro-Vitamin A rice varieties to perform agronomically, there seems to be no roll-out plan to ensure that it gets to those who need it. Those reasons have nothing to do with regulations and everything to do with logistics, institutions and finances.
Will the golden rice developers truck their harvest into the urban slums and remote rural areas of Asia or Africa, or at least the Philippines, every day? Will they bring with them also the fat that malnourished people need to eat along with the rice to ensure they absorb the beta-carotene and convert it to vitamin A? And if they can do that, why aren’t they bringing existing foods into those areas already? Why wait until a patented GM food is ready for delivery? There is no shortage of vitamin-rich foods on this planet and beta-carotene is one of the commonest molecules in nature.
Frequently, vitamin A-rich food exists in abundance and rots in storage or under trees not that far away from the places where people suffer from malnutrition. An alternative already in the field is, for example, a non-GMO orange sweet potato, a root crop compatible with improved crop rotations whose developers have been awarded the 2016 World Food Prize. Without a massive and expensive roll-out plan, golden rice will not even leave the field station of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), which is overseeing the golden rice project.

Epic endeavour

If their plan is to cross the pro-vitamin A trait into the rice varieties that farmers grow in hunger-stricken areas, they face an uphill logistic, financial, scientific and institutional battle. How will they get the transgenic trait reliably expressed in all of these varieties at the necessary concentrations over many generations of rice plantings and seed recycling? Who will pay for this epic endeavour?
If they decide instead to only put the pro-vitamin A trait into a handful of, say, IRRI rice varieties (which we believe is the most likely plan – if there is a plan in the first place), many will fail because they will not perform in different local conditions and they typically require fertilizers and pesticides. If the plan is to switch farmers to growing a handful of patented biofortified varieties all over Asia and Africa, how will this be implemented? Who will deliver the seeds and accompanying chemicals to farmers – year after year, everywhere where it’s needed, for free? And is this a sustainable solution?
And what will happen to the thousands of existing ecologically and culturally well adapted varieties? The genetic diversity of crops and animals is our life-support system.
Furthermore, have they asked the rice producers and consumers of Asia and Africa if they want many of their rice varieties to be yellow forever – even in times when the food shortages and nutrition deficiencies are over?

Unresolved patent and ownership issues

According to the website www.goldenrice.org., a resource-poor farmer will be allowed to grow golden rice without license fees as long as his/her income is less than $10,000 per year. But, in practice, who decides which farmers are eligible? Who decides which income limit is appropriate in what country or region, and who enforces it on what authority and criteria? What about those farmers whose incomes exceed $10,000 per year? Who will decide when to collect fees, from whom, and for how long? How will the finances be arranged between Syngenta, which owns GR2, the seed multipliers and distributors, and the government? And if all this can be settled with Syngenta – how about the next-in-line patented, biofortified GM crops? In case of dispute, will there be free access to lawyers for the resource-poor farmers?
In their weekly column Schaffer and Ray (2016) reported about a meeting with an employee of the US State Department and discussing the benefits of GM crops for farmers and consumers in the Global South and whether or not farmers would have to pay a technology fee and purchase, for example, the golden rice seed each year. The State Department representative stated that the companies that own the patents would be willing to make the golden rice (or virus-resistant cassava) available at no cost provided that the countries adopted US patent regimes to protect other GM crops. From a policy perspective, such a ‘humanitarian’ license agreement would thereby present a highly profitable transaction, a means to ‘encourage’ developing countries that often do not even have patent laws of their own to accept the US patent regime and so ensure the profits of US companies and patent holders in perpetuity. In corporate agriculture it seems, nothing is really for free.
These are just a few of the tough questions that have never been addressed or even acknowledged by promoters of golden rice or any other such projects. Shooting genes into nuclei and getting a few varieties to express a transgene is the easy part – although even that has proved elusive so far for GR2.

Fact 5: Colonial mindset

Blaming Greenpeace for the failure of not only golden rice but other patented products of genetic engineering has been an irrational (or maybe calculated) obsession of some proponents and developers since the discussion began decades ago. Yet, it also reveals more subtle issues. Farmers and indigenous people are outraged when gene technology proponents accuse them of being instructed or manipulated by big Western NGOs like Greenpeace. They say that promoters of golden rice and other techno-solutions offered by developed countries rarely ask for or listen to their views and, thereby, reveal their lack of respect and comprehension.
This attitude towards peasant farmers and indigenous peoples is typical of the still prevailing colonial, Western mindset – hidden or open. It assumes that the peasant farmers are ignorant people without the relevant knowledge entitling them to make informed decisions based on their own values and visions for their future. Sadly, the letter signed by Nobel laureates appears to be a continuation of this way of thinking. It reveals an attitude of supremacy over, and disrespect for, traditional and indigenous knowledge and peoples who want to have a say in their lives and communities and which path to take to ‘development’
https://www.eureporter.co/frontpage/2016/08/15/millions-spent-no-one-served-who-is-to-blame-for-failure-of-gmo-golden-rice/





Rice taskforce created, again

The Ministry of Commerce Rice is harvested from a field using a small harvest machine in Tbong Khmum province earlier this year. Heng Chivoan
set up a new taskforce on Friday to address challenges faced by the Kingdom’s struggling rice industry and assess demands made by members of the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF), who have decried the ineffectiveness of an earlier taskforce set up by the ministry.
Moul Sarith, CRF secretary, said the new taskforce will comprise 13 members from the Ministry of Commerce and 11 members from the CRF. The ad hoc working group will seek to address six separate points brought forward by CRF President Sok Puthyvuth during a meeting with Minister of Commerce Pan Sorasak on Friday.
One of the key demands by the CRF is to obtain shared responsibility with the Minister of Commerce to attribute Certificate of Origin status to rice exporters.
“We want the right to check and approve the certificate of origin of any rice exporter in order to strengthen and control rice quality and prevent false product labelling,” Sarith said. “And as we are working to promote the rice sector, we wish to have a substantial role in the interactions that take place between the Chinese rice association and Cambodia.”
Former minister of commerce Sun Chantol created the first taskforce last March to study threats to the sustainability of the country’s rice industry. Its goals at the time were to formulate urgent measures aimed at stemming the flood of illegal rice imports and facilitating the offer of $20-$30 million in soft loans to struggling rice millers.
However, the new taskforce will not replace the previous one, but rather address separate issues, according to Ministry of Commerce spokesperson Soeng Sophary.
“The work of the new taskforce is to address the six points raised by the CRF and it will only exist temporarily to resolve these new emergencies,” she said. “The previous taskforce was created to solve the issues faced by the sector as a whole and will continue working as normal.”
Tang Chhong Ngy, marketing manager of rice miller LBN Angkor (Kampuchea), said the first taskforce had been highly ineffective and the second working group was created after the same issues were raised again by the CRF.
“We saw many procedures at the national level but none that actually went into operation,” he said
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/rice-taskforce-created-again


Joint Working Group for Rice

The Ministry of Commerce and the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF) on Friday set up a joint working group to provide immediate relief to the Kingdom’s beleaguered rice sector, where rice millers are currently struggling to stay afloat in a market flooded by cheap imports from Vietnam.According to a Ministry of Commerce press release on Friday, the joint working group will comprise experts from the ministry and CRF with a mandate to seek “immediate solutions” and work with the Kingdom’s development partners, to help Cambodia’s ailing rice sector.
“Minister of Commerce Pan Sorasak agreed to the formation of this joint working group and from this week, the group will begin its important work,” said Soeng Sophary, the Commerce Ministry’s spokesperson.
The specter of insolvency looms large over the businesses of rice millers in Cambodia as they struggle to recover from the aftereffects of a severe drought. To make matters worse, they are also facing stiff competition from low-grade rice flowing into the country from Vietnam.In March, rice millers and exporters wrote to the government urging intervention due to stiff competition in export markets as well as domestic ones. In the letter, they said they were facing a cash crunch due to a flood of low-grade rice from Vietnam while stressing that bankruptcy was widespread among farmers, millers and exporters alike.

 

 The letter said Vietnamese companies were snapping up high-quality Cambodian paddy for export from Vietnam and flooding the Cambodian market with low-grade rice. This, the letter said, was driving domestic millers out of the market.The working group will discuss all issues troubling the rice sector,” said Sok Puthy Vuth, the president of CRF.“The issues would also include an independent monitoring of milled rice exports, the trademark registration of Malis [fragrant] rice and the use of the word ‘Tonle Sap’ to geographically indicate Cambodia’s milled rice,” said Mr. Vuth.

 
Mr. Vuth said the working group would also follow up on the application for a $300 million loan from the Chinese government, to build large silos to store rice for milling.The CRF has been urging the government to build silos for storing paddy rice in order to boost rice exports and the $300 million loan was to build 10 large silos, which could store a total of 1.2 million tons of paddy rice to ensure both millers and exporters had a continuous supply of the commodity.Aun Pornmoniroth, Economy and Finance Minister, said in a meeting with CRF in late June that Cambodia would not totally stop importing rice from neighboring countries, including Vietnam. However, he said the government planned to reduce the export duty of milled rice.According data from Ministry of Agriculture, Cambodia’s rice exports fell about six percent from 283,825 tons in the first six months of last year to about 268,190 tons in same period this year
http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/28455/joint-working-group-for-rice/


I'm in favour of genetically modified food – and so are the scientists who back Golden Rice


    • 18:24, 14 Aug 2016

More than 100 Nobel-winning scientists have hit back at campaigners like Greenpeace, claiming the new advances will help fight world hunger

Getty
Golden Rice could help fight vitamin A deficiency and related diseases
Genetically modified food is back under the spotlight and I have to admit, I’ve never been against it. Nature itself changes the genes in plants to produce “natural” GM foods. Plus, explosive increases in the world’s population means such advances are needed to fight famine.Now 109 eminent Nobel laureates have told us to stop GMO-bashing too.They have posted a letter online saying: “ Greenpeace has spearheaded opposition to Golden Rice, which has the potential to reduce or eliminate much of the death and disease caused by a vitamin A deficiency, which has the greatest impact on the poorest people in Africa and southeast Asia.”
How can anyone fly in the face of preventing starvation? Not me.
I agree with the proponents of ­genetically modified foods such as Golden Rice, which contains genes from corn and a bacterium, when they argue they’re a source of essential nutrients.
Greenpeace has accused corporations of over-hyping Golden Rice
Greenpeace counter that argument by saying that corporations are over-hyping Golden Rice to pave the way for global approval of other more profitable ­genetically engineered crops.
To set the record straight, Richard J Roberts, one of two winners of the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, spearheaded the letter writing.
He said: “There’s been a tremendous amount of misinformation put out by Greenpeace.”