Untitled Document
 
¿¬±¸»ç¾÷ |ÇмúȸÀÇ |¼Ò½Ä/¾È³» |ÀÚ·á½Ç |µ¿¿µ»ó/°¶·¯¸® |
 
 
 
 
>> Ãßõµµ¼­
>> º¸°í¼­
>> ³í¹®
>> ¹ßÇ¥/°­ÀÇ
>> ´º½º±â»ç
>> ¿î¿µÀ§¿øÄ®·³
>> °øÁö»çÇ×
 
2025 ±¹È¸ Åä·Ðȸ ½Äǰ°øÀü ...
 
Á¦   ¸ñ  
How I Got Converted to G.M.O. Food - The New York Times
[ 2015-07-02 15:30:17 ]
±Û¾´ÀÌ  
°ü¸®ÀÚ
Á¶È¸¼ö: 19045        
¸µÅ© #1  
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/25/opinion/sunday/how-i-got-converted-to-gmo-food.html?_r=0 , Hit: 261400
 

As we squatted in the muddy field, examining the lush green foliage and shiny purple fruits, he explained how, for the first time this season, he had been able to stop using pesticides. This was thanks to a new pest-resistant variety of eggplant supplied by the government-run Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute.

Despite a recent hailstorm, the weather had been kind, and the new crop flourished. Productivity nearly doubled. Mr. Rahman had already harvested the small plot 10 times, he said, and sold the brinjal (eggplant¡¯s name in the region) labeled ¡°insecticide free¡± at a small premium in the local market. Now, with increased profits, he looked forward to being able to lift his family further out of poverty. I could see why this was so urgent: Half a dozen shirtless kids gathered around, clamoring for attention. They all looked stunted by malnutrition.

In a rational world, Mr. Rahman would be receiving support from all sides. He is improving the environment and tackling poverty. Yet the visit was rushed, and my escorts from the research institute were nervous about permitting me to speak with him at all.

The new variety had been subjected to incendiary coverage in the local press, and campaign groups based in Dhaka were suing to have the pest-resistant eggplant banned. Activists had visited some of the fields and tried to pressure the farmers to uproot their crops. Our guides from the institute warned that there was a continuing threat of violence — and they were clearly keen to leave.

Why was there such controversy? Because Mr. Rahman¡¯s pest-resistant eggplant was produced using genetic modification. A gene transferred from a soil bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis (more commonly known by the abbreviation ¡°Bt¡±), produces a protein that kills the Fruit and Shoot Borer, a species of moth whose larvae feed on the eggplant, without the need for pesticide sprays. (The protein is entirely nontoxic to other insects and indeed humans.)

The stakes are especially high because Mr. Rahman is one of only 108 farmers in Bangladesh currently permitted to try out the new variety. Moreover, this is among the first genetically modified food crops to be grown by farmers anywhere in the developing world. Virtually every crop, in every other country, has so far been blocked.

In neighboring India, green campaigners managed to secure a nationwide moratorium against the genetically modified eggplant in 2010. In the Philippines, a Greenpeace-led coalition has tied up the variety in litigation for two years. Greenpeace activists took the precaution of wrecking field trials first, by pulling up the plants.

After writing two books on the science of climate change, I decided I could no longer continue taking a pro-science position on global warming and an anti-science position on G.M.O.s.

There is an equivalent level of scientific consensus on both issues, I realized, that climate change is real and genetically modified foods are safe. I could not defend the expert consensus on one issue while opposing it on the other.

In Africa, however, countries have fallen like dominoes to anti-G.M. campaigns. I am writing this at a biotechnology conference in Nairobi, where the government slapped a G.M.O. import ban in 2012 after activists brandished pictures of rats with tumors and claimed that G.M. foods caused cancer.

The origin of the scare was a French scientific paper that was later retracted by the journal in which it was originally published because of numerous flaws in methodology. Yet Kenya¡¯s ban remains, creating a food-trade bottleneck that will raise prices, worsening malnutrition and increasing poverty for millions.

In Uganda, the valuable banana crop is being devastated by a new disease called bacterial wilt, while the starchy cassava, a subsistence staple, has been hit by two deadly viruses. Biotech scientists have produced resistant varieties of both crops using genetic modification, but anti-G.M.O. groups have successfully prevented the Ugandan Parliament from passing a biosafety law necessary for their release.

An eminent Ghanaian scientist whom I met recently had received such a high level of harassment from campaigners that he was considering taking a dossier to the police. Activists in his country have also gone to court to stall progress in biotech development.

The environmental movement¡¯s war against genetic engineering has led to a deepening rift with the scientific community. A recent survey by the Pew Research Center and the American Association for the Advancement of Science showed a greater gap between scientists and the public on G.M.O.s than on any other scientific controversy: While 88 percent of association scientists agreed it was safe to eat genetically modified foods, only 37 percent of the public did — a gap in perceptions of 51 points. (The gap on climate change was 37 points; on childhood vaccinations, 18 points.)

On genetic engineering, environmentalists have been markedly more successful than climate change deniers or anti-vaccination campaigners in undermining public understanding of science. The scientific community is losing this battle. If you need visual confirmation of that, try a Google Images search for the term ¡°G.M.O.¡± Scary pictures proliferate, from an archetypal evil scientist injecting tomatoes with a syringe — an utterly inaccurate representation of the real process of genetic engineering — to tumor-riddled rats and ghoulish chimeras like fish-apples.

As someone who participated in the early anti-G.M.O. movement, I feel I owe a debt to Mr. Rahman and other farmers in developing countries who could benefit from this technology. At Cornell, I am working to amplify the voices of farmers and scientists in a more informed conversation about what biotechnology can bring to food security and environmental protection.

No one claims that biotech is a silver bullet. The technology of genetic modification can¡¯t make the rains come on time or ensure that farmers in Africa have stronger land rights. But improved seed genetics can make a contribution in all sorts of ways: It can increase disease resistance and drought tolerance, which are especially important as climate change continues to bite; and it can help tackle hidden malnutritional problems like vitamin A deficiency.

We need this technology. We must not let the green movement stand in its way.




138/192, ÃÑ °Ô½Ã¹° : 3840
1100 ½É»óÂúÀº ½Ò°ª¡¦´ëÃ¥ ±ÞÇÏ´Ù - ³ó¹Î½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-16 47 7081
1099 ±× ¸¹Àº GMO, ´Ù ¾îµð °¬³ª - Áß¾ÓÀϺ¸ °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-12 47 11032
1098 "Ú¸¼öÀÔ ³ó½Äǰ GMO Ç¥½Ã±âÁØ ¿ì¸® ¹æ½Ä Àû¿ë - ¾Æ½Ã¾ÆÅõµ¥ÀÌ °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-12 47 6718
1097 ¹ä Á᫐ °Ç°­ ½Ä»ýȰ ¾ÆÀ̵ð¾î °ø¸ð - ½ÄǰÀú³Î °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-09 47 9108
1096 õ¿¬ ÷°¡¹°°ú È­ÇÐÀû ÇÕ¼ºÇ° - ½ÄǰÀ½·á½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-09 47 7734
1095 ½Äǰ¡¤¿Ü½Ä»ê¾÷ ±ÔÁ¦ °³¼±, ÇÕ¸®Àû °áÁ¤ÀÌ Áß¿äÇÏ´Ù - ½Äǰ¿Ü½Ä°æÁ¦ °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-09 47 9894
1094 ½Ä»ýȰ º¯È­¿¡ ´Éµ¿ÀûÀ¸·Î ´ëÀÀÇØ¾ß - ³ó¼öÃà»ê½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-09 47 7784
1093 ½Ò½ÃÀå °³¹æ ³íÀÇ¿¡ ´ëÇÑ ´Ü»ó - ³ó¹Î½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-05 47 6830
1092 2014³â ½Ò ÀÚ±Þ·ü 92% Àü¸ÁµÇ´Âµ¥¡¦ ³ó°¡ ½Ò°ª Æø¶ô ¿ì·Á ¿Ö? - ±¹¹ÎÀϺ¸ °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-05 48 9744
1091 Çѱ¹ ³ó¾÷ Ä¡¸íŸ, ÇÑ¡¤Áß FTA - ³ó¼öÃà»ê½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-03 48 7066
1090 ´Ù¾çÇÑ ¢¥½Ò °¡°ø½Äǰ¢¥ ¼ÒºñÀÚ À¯È¤ - ³ó¼öÃà»ê½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-03 47 7072
1089 Áï¼®¹ä ½ÃÀå '¾¦¾¦'¡¦°Ç°­¡¤À£ºù °æÀï Ä¡¿­- SBS´º½º °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-06-02 47 8610
1088 ¹äÀ» ÀÌ¿ëÇÑ »óǰ°³¹ß¿¡ Àû±Ø ³ª¼­¾ß - ³ó¼öÃà»ê½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 6947
1087 ³ó»ê¹° °¡°Ý Æøµî¶ô, ÇØ¹ýÀº ¾ø³ª - ³ó¼öÃà»ê½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 7327
1086 ½ÄǰÁ¦Á¶¾÷ 5³â°£ 10.2% ¢¥°í¼ºÀ墥 - ³ó¼öÃà»ê½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 6762
1085 ÀϺ» Ȱ¿ëÇß´ø ű¹»ê ¼â¹Ì ÂüÁ¶¶© 396% - ³ó¹Î½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 8902
1084 ¡®½Ò °¡°ø»ê¾÷À°¼º ±âº»°èȹ¡¯ 2³â° °¨°¨ - ³ó¹Î½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 7031
1083 ¹Ý°¡¿î ³óÇùÀÇ »õ ½Ä±¸ ¡®³ó¿ì¹ÙÀÌ¿À¡¯ - ³ó¹Î½Å¹® °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 7690
1082 ³ó»ê¹° À¯Åë, Á¶¼º ±â´ÉÀÇ Á¤»óÈ­°¡ ÇÊ¿äÇÏ´Ù - aTÀ¯Åëin °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 1840 7144
1081 GMÀÛ¹°°ú ±¹°¡ ½Ä·®¾Èº¸ - ¼¼°èÀϺ¸ °ü¸®ÀÚ 2014-05-30 47 7141
ù ÆäÀÌÁö   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140     ³¡ ÆäÀÌÁö
À̸§ Á¦¸ñ ³»¿ë
 
 
   
  A few images from Freepik.com