Former Defra secretary Owen Paterson has blasted rocker Neil Young over the release of his forthcoming anti-GM album.

The 69-year-old Canadian folk legend and environmental activist will release The Monsanto Years this month, a new album which casts a critical eye on the US biotech and food industry giant.

According to Rolling Stone magazine, the album targets Monsanto, the world’s largest producer of genetically modified seeds, in a series of anti-GM songs.

See also: GM opponents condemn billions to death, says Paterson

In one song, Mr Young sings: “I love to start my day off without helping Monsanto. Monsanto, let our farmers grow what they want to grow. From the fields of Nebraska from the banks of the Ohio, farmers won’t be free to grow what they want to grow. If corporate control takes over the American farm with fascist politicians and chemical giants walking arm in arm.”

However, Mr Paterson attacked into Mr Young in an opinion piece penned for the New York Post, titled “How Neil Young, Greenpeace work to starve the world’s poor”.

He accuses Mr Young of “following the lead of activists” who claim that GMs are “harmful to health, farmers and the environment”.

Mr Paterson said this stance is “tragically wrong” and he makes his point by highlighting the case of so-called “golden rice”, which has been genetically modified with enhanced vitamin A-producing beta-carotene.

The Conservative MP for North Shropshire claims 500,000 people, mostly children, lose their sight each year because of a “lavish scare campaign”, by environmentalist groups including Greenpeace, which has kept golden rice off the market.

Mr Paterson writes: “Instead of bashing companies that are trying to save lives, Young ought to use his star power to convince the NGO community to do the right thing and support giving the developing world the GMO tools it needs to feed its growing, and tragically malnourished, populations.”