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GM crops:
'Point of no return in ten years'
Scotsman.com | June 28, 2007
By SYBILLE DE LA HAMAIDE
EUROPE will increase its
genetically modified (GMO) crop area by 50,000-100,000 hectares a
year over the next decade, US biotech giant Monsanto has said.
"It will be slow but within ten
years GMOs will have reached the point of no return," said
Jean-Michel Duhamel, Monsanto's director for southern Europe.
"The technology will not impose
itself on consumers but consumers will better understand the
usefulness of GMO technology as farmers increasingly adopt it," he
added.
In France, the world's largest
seed maker, GMO maize - the only biotech crop allowed in the country
- was expected to be grown on 600,000 hectares in ten years, against
25,000 in 2007, despite fierce opposition to GMOs in the country.
"It is more complicated in France
than elsewhere but if we reach a 50 per cent rise (in area) per year
it wouldn't be bad, as at world level we expect it to rise 20 per
cent," Duhamel said.
French consumers are well known
for their scepticism, if not hostility, to GMO crops. "Within the
next few years there will likely be some turbulence," Duhamel said.
"Consumers receive false information on what GMO crops are so they
are afraid. But I'm sure that within ten years they will have
accepted them."
This year, French farmers have
sown 25,000 hectares of special maize, which has been modified to
resist insect pests.
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