| KANSAS
CITY, Mo. (Reuters) - A loaf of bread could soon become
controversial.
From
university laboratories to U.S. government-run greenhouses,
research is moving forward to bring the first genetically
modified (GMO) wheat to market as early as 2003.
The
goals are noble -- to make wheat production more efficient
and robust for farmers and to make wheat better for bakers
and more nutritious for consumers.
But
success may also open a new front in the global debate
over the safety of genetically modified foods as biotech
wheat makes its way into staples like bread, crackers
and pasta.
``There
is this fear of unleashing genes into the food supply
and into the environment,'' said Jim Peterson, a wheat
breeder at Oregon State University, which recently signed
a deal with Monsanto Co. to develop a gene-altered wheat.
``Until we can have a gene that has true consumer benefits,
we are going to have some trouble with acceptance.''
Wheat
is the second-largest food grain grown in the world --
corn is the first -- and is the top grain traded internationally,
making it subject to intense global scrutiny.
That
fact, combined with a swarm of protests in the United
States, Europe and Asia over fears that GMO crops might
harm human health and the environment, have many in the
wheat industry more than a little nervous.
GMO
advocates say the technology is safe, but so far, the
market is unconvinced.
``'If
you grow GMO wheat, we will not want to buy it.' That's
what we're hearing from our customers,'' U.S. Wheat Associates
spokeswoman Dawn Forsythe said. ``They're saying 'we see
where it is helpful for your farmers, but what does it
do for us, and why should we buy it?'''
Forsythe
said that the top importers of U.S. wheat, including Egypt
and Japan, have already said they want nothing to do with
GMO wheat.
Science
Faces Fierce Protests
Despite
the concerns, Oregon State and three other U.S. universities
have recently agreed with Monsanto, the leading player
in advancing genetically modified grain varieties, to
develop and bring to market a ``Roundup Ready'' spring
wheat as early as 2003.
The
deals with Oregon State, Washington State University,
South Dakota State University and the University of Minnesota
would bring little direct benefit to consumers, who know
spring wheat mainly as the chief ingredient in bagels
and rolls.
But
farmers could theoretically save on production costs with
the herbicide-tolerant strain.
Monsanto
is also in discussions with other universities for research
into different wheat classes, such as hard red winter
wheat, another bread staple.
Monsanto,
which has been the subject of many anti-GMO protests,
became a unit of U.S.-Swedish drug firm Pharmacia Corp
(NYSE:PHA - news) in March. Company officials declined
to discuss the issue other than to confirm that the company
was currently in the research phase of developing Roundup
Ready wheat.
The
work in GMO wheat comes amid a global firestorm of controversy
that is complicating efforts to promote modified corn,
a quarter of the U.S. crop, and soybeans, which make up
more than half of the soybeans that American farmers produce.
Protesters
have vandalized and burned biotech university laboratories
in the United States, started a riot at an international
biotechnology industry meeting in Italy, and ambushed
a U.S. cargo ship in Wales carrying genetically modified
soybeans.
In
addition to fears of damage to health and environment,
some GMO opponents also say companies pushing the technology
want to control the food supply.
Wheat
Farmers Worry
Similar
opposition could be lying in wait for wheat, a crop that
amounted to $3.7 billion in U.S. exports last year and
is one of the United States' top agricultural export products.
And
all of the controversy has wheat farmers in a bind. GMO
wheat could help boost their bottom line, or it could
leave them with bins full of unmarketable grain.
``Wheat
farmers would like to embrace the technology but they
also are concerned about their export markets, which account
for 50 percent of total U.S. wheat production,'' said
Darrell Hanavan, head of a biotech committee of the National
Association of Wheat Growers and U.S. Wheat Associates.
``Farmers
are asking 'Is it going to be accepted?' We don't know
the answer to that,'' Hanavan said.
Many
in the wheat industry are working on strategies for segregation
so U.S. wheat customers won't have to worry about GM0
wheat mixed in with non-GM0 wheat. But no clear plan has
been defined yet.
Meanwhile,
a growing sentiment says the solution to market acceptance
is likely to be found in products that directly benefit
consumers, rather than farmers or large corporations.
As
far as wheat goes, that day is a long way off, according
to Ann Blechl, a geneticist with the Agricultural Research
Service of the U.S. Agriculture Department.
Blechl
is now working on GMO traits to give consumers wheat with
improved protein for bread and pasta, eliminating the
nutritional need for meat and bean proteins, as well as
wheat with better baking characteristics.
``In
the present political climate I don't know how close we'll
ever get to bringing these things to market,'' she said.
University
of Minnesota wheat breeder Jim Anderson, one of those
working on the new GMO spring wheat, is also less than
optimistic: ``I don't know that anybody wants to be first
with this, and have to test the waters.''
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