A number of people who I respect have written articles and chapters in books that support GMO crops. These include leading environmentalist Mark Lynas, author of The God Species: How the planet can survive the age of humans, and Ramez Naam, author of The Infinite Resource: The power of ideas on a finite planet.

Other people (who I also respect) are strongly against GMO food. Even a short trip around the internet turns up a huge and deeply-fearful anti-GMO movement. In fact, for the last few years, almost every casual acquaintance that I talk to is quick to vilify GMO foods.

I set out to research what I could. I found no scientific articles that supported the fear. I didn’t find any conclusive evidence that there are any significant problems. None. I’ve found plenty of scary articles, but not one study that actually demonstrated real harm. I have come to the conclusion that GMO’s are almost certainly safe for humans to consume as grown and distributed so far. Asds appear to use more roundup, which gives Monsanto a double-win).

I did see some things I don’t like or trust, including Monsanto’s lobbying practices. For example, some GMO crops have reduced the use of more toxic pesticides (although bT corn fields appear to use more roundup, which gives Monsanto a double-win). I agree with the assertion that there are things we can’t know yet and that there might – might – be long-term consequences we haven’t seen yet. But I actually came across more lies and half-truths coming from the anti-GM side than the largely silent pro-GMO side (largely in the form of pretty simple “Monsanto is evil” comments and un-supported ties between GMO corn and the death of bees and butterflies, GMO corn and obesity, etc.). Also note that what Monsanto has done in agriculture is not terribly different than what any tech company in my world (I’m a CIO by day) has done to protect their own products and intellectual property and income streams. Two wrongs don’t make a right, and I’m not about to go out on a limb and cheer for Monsanto right now, but a little perspective might be in order.

I think GMO foods need to be regulated, tested, and introduced slowly. I’d love to see a non-GMO certification like the organic certification programs, and to see ingredient labels specify the GMO ingredients – we have right to know what’s in the food we’re buying.

We do need to demand care. Development of transgenic plants is an area where it would be possible to make mistakes, maybe even big ones. But that doesn’t mean we can afford to ignore our knowledge in this area, or that the genii will even go back into the bottle should we try to stuff it in.

And it’s a genii with some power; one we might want on our side. Big mistakes are possible, but so are even bigger payoffs which we may desperately need.

The idea of improving on nature is not new, and not even recent. We’ve been changing plants throughout history through a variety of techniques. We will – and should – continue to do this. But transgenic crops are different. That’s what makes them powerful. Golden rice is a GMO staple which was developed to counter a dangerous vitamin A deficiency. It was not created to make money; it was created to improve health. Vitamin A could not have been inserted into this rice using old tools.

Not only is it time to stop vilifying Monsanto for its very existence (while remaining watchful and even noisy about the things we don’t like), but it’s also time to separate how we feel about this technology from how we feel about big agribusiness.

We should consider GMO plants one of the more powerful tools in a full toolbox.

I can easily imagine a time in the future when we are going to need even more sophisticated genetic modification abilities. Between the twin pressures of population growth and climate change, we probably need to grow crops in new places with different conditions, or even in the same places with different conditions. We may need to make plants hardier, or to make them survive with less (or more) water. We may need to make them hyper-capable of photosynthesis. Hiding our heads in the sand is not the best way to prepare for this. Instead, we should be working hard and fast to ensure a strong testing framework and we should be funding university research and non-profit efforts to use this technology for good.

I did a little brainstorming. Ways we might use transgenic crops in the future include:

Trees built to store more carbon than current forests

Wheat that can grow in a desert and survive a monsoon

Wheat that people with gluten allergies can eat

Pine trees that are resistant to the bark beetle

High yields on almost any food plant

or even

or even A plant with a sugar flower, a perfect protein berry, and carbohydrate leaves.

In my research journey on GMO’s, I found a lot of negative storm with no substance, and many reasons to support this technology while remaining cautious and watchful.

Note – I am sure I haven’t seen all of the research (pro or con). Please feel free to link to articles that contain actual information on any side of this argument.

Links for further reading and research….

Source: ieet.org