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Biotech Businesses The Almighty Buck Science

How 4H Is Helping Big Ag Take Over Africa 377

Lasrick writes 4H is in Africa, helping to distribute Big Ag products like DuPont's Pioneer seeds through ostensibly good works aimed at youth. In Africa, where the need to produce more food is especially urgent, DuPont Pioneer and other huge corporations have made major investments. But there are drawbacks: "DuPont's nutritious, high-yielding, and drought-tolerant hybrid seed costs 10 times as much. While Ghanaians typically save their own seeds to plant the next year, hybrid seeds get weaker by the generation; each planting requires another round of purchasing. What's more, says Devlin Kuyek, a researcher with the sustainable-farming nonprofit Genetic Resources Action International, because hybrid seeds are bred for intensive agriculture, they typically need chemicals to thrive."
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How 4H Is Helping Big Ag Take Over Africa

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  • by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @08:06PM (#48374589)

    What are the possible choices for farmers?

    1. grow crappy crops with free seeds and lots of expensive water,
    2. grow good groups with seeds that you need to pay for but use less water?

    #2 will make you more money, so the cost of the seeds is a non-factor. #1 will make you poor, because when it doesn't rain your crops die.

    So, what exactly is the issue?

    • by pubwvj ( 1045960 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @08:27PM (#48374705)

      You are demonstrating a classic lack of understanding about farming and agriculture. Reality is not the either or situation that you hypothesize.

      In the real world we save our best seed and livestock year to year using that to grow the next generation. With each generation the plants and animals become more adapted, stronger and do better with the local conditions. The seed and livestock are free, other than having to save some back from the harvest. This is how we have traditionally improved our stock, both plants and animals, for thousands of years. It works without paying high prices for fancy seeds.

      Thus the option is #0, which you completely neglected to consider.

      • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

        What you say is true but there is more to it. The GMO crops are often immune to diseases that plague traditional crops. They thrive where others die. They produce more per acre. There is a reason farmers buy the GMO seeds and that is that it makes them money. Yes they have to go back to buy more seeds but I remember my Grandfather buying new seed in the sixties. He didn't keep seed over year to year either. Even then it was often hybrid crops that didn't have the same properties when used as seed.

        • How exactly are GMO seeds better that non-GMO seeds with otherwise similar qualities? highly selected, high yield, adapted to the conditions and ease of farming etc., even "evil" dependency on buying seed every year.
          I believe you get very small gain at the cost of totally unpredictable genetic pollution of the environment and unknown costs of it.

          The risk/gain seems bad to me. I'm the kind of guy to favor nuclear power and to push for a ban on agricultural GMOs. They're offensive for scientific and humane re

      • by hibiki_r ( 649814 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @09:58PM (#48375177)

        OK, if that's really how it works, why do American farmers plant so much agribusiness seed? Are they all wrong, and losing money? Because if there's one thing that a farmer will ask when you suggest a change to his growth protocol, is how is it going to make him more money.

        Hybrid vigor is a thing, and the only way to maintain said vigor across generations is to grow inbred plants, and then cross them purposefully. This works without GMOs, and is easy to prove.

        Again, for your option to be true, hundreds of thousands of farmers in the US are making terrible choices, season after season. 95% of soybeans planted in America come from agribusiness: The seeds people had just can't compete in yield. How do you explain farmer's behavior?

      • by silfen ( 3720385 )

        Thus the option is #0, which you completely neglected to consider.

        And selling GMO seeds is taking away option #0... how?

      • Yeah but if that were working so well then DuPont would be buying seeds from the Africans, right? Clearly in this instance DuPont has done a better job making superior seeds than the locals have. Otherwise this would not be an issue.

      • by ChromeAeonium ( 1026952 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @10:13PM (#48375225)

        We did that for millennia before switching to hybrid seed. Ever consider that there might be a reason why farmers would be willing to pay more for their seed? Over the past century hybrid seeds, as well as increased focus on plant breeding, have given massive yield gains. No one is saying that locally adapted traits shouldn't be used, of course they should, everyone including the companies selling they hybrid seeds know that, but hybrid vigor is a very real and very powerful thing, and there's no way around that.

      • by dbc ( 135354 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @10:14PM (#48375227)

        ??? Dude, that is the way my great-grandfather farmed when he moved from New York to homestead in the Iowa territory. Most grains haven't been grown from saved seed for two generations. Pigs are now hybred breeds. Dairy has been using artificial insemination breeding programs for two generations. You are a little behind the times, my friend. Before you go spouting off about agricultural science, I suggest you learn some..

      • This post is spot on, because many of the people impacted by the influx of GMO seeds are sustenance farmers, not profit based farms. Attempting to convert them to a money making agriculture system does not work very well because the people have little to no income sources to go buy food that people are selling. The few jobs these companies create do not support the economy, and the pay is so low that it can't support the economy.

        The current reality is that these small governments must subsidize what used

    • by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @08:28PM (#48374709) Journal

      #2 will make you more money, so the cost of the seeds is a non-factor. #1 will make you poor, because when it doesn't rain your crops die.

      So, what exactly is the issue?

      The issue is that you didn't RTFA.
      Most farmers cannot afford the seeds, so the cost turns out to be the main factor.
      Add in the price of synthetic fertilizers and most farmers can only use DuPont seeds if their government subsidizes the products.

      There are important questions surrounding the wisdom of allowing 1 corporation to be a choke point for a significant portion of any country's agricultural output.

    • you are assuming that they pay for irrigation water. In the third world most crops are not irrigated, they depend on rain. Western crops generally require herbicides and pesticides to get those huge crops, so they have to buy that as well as the seeds. There is no shortage of food in the third world, it's a shortage of money to pay for the food that's the problem. Many of these poor people make their living by selling food. This is why selling massively subsidized western food is killing the Africans.
    • by crioca ( 1394491 )

      What are the possible choices for farmers?

      You forgot 3. grow good crops with free seeds.

      So, what exactly is the issue?

      Repressive Intellectual Property laws are prolonging global poverty and hunger by restricting access to technologies that could realistically be provided freely or at cost.

    • But, BIG AG! I mean, how do I understand these things without attributing them to boogeymen?

    • by lkcl ( 517947 ) <lkcl@lkcl.net> on Thursday November 13, 2014 @08:21AM (#48377091) Homepage

      What are the possible choices for farmers?

      1. grow crappy crops with free seeds and lots of expensive water,
      2. grow good groups with seeds that you need to pay for but use less water?

      #2 will make you more money, so the cost of the seeds is a non-factor. #1 will make you poor, because when it doesn't rain your crops die.

      So, what exactly is the issue?

      this is a completely wrong analysis. if (2) was true those people would have been dead centuries or millenia ago. the fact that they are still alive tells you that they get by, and that, honestly, is good enough.

      there was an attempt a few decades ago to do exactly what DuPont is doing [again]. i do not understand why 1st world countries do not leave the 3rd world alone to grow their own food. 1st world conditions are NOT THE SAME as 3rd world conditions.

      the study that i heard about was exactly the same situation. a 3rd world country which had extremely poor yields was interfered with by a 1st world country providing donations of high-yield maize. for three to four years the success of the trials resulted in bumper crops and the surrounding farmers clambered onto the 1st world genetic variety maize.

      then there was a drought.

      the high-yield 1st world maize died, and the entire area went into famine. next year, because nothing had grown, nobody had any food the year after, either.

      basically it turned out that the low-yield maize had a MASSIVE genetic diversity. some variants thrived in good conditions, some grew successfully *EVEN IN DROUGHT CONDITIONS*. no matter what happened, those people always got some food. not necessarily a lot, but enough so that they didn't die.

      now the problem was with this stupid, stupid interference by a 1st world country was that because everyone in the area had converted over to this wonderful high-yield maize, NOBODY HAD ANY OF THE OLD GENETIC VARIETY LEFT.

      it was a decade before the country properly recovered, and that was just from one drought.

      so the conclusion is, unescapably, that DuPont is intent on killing people just to make a profit, as this isn't the first time that providing 1st world maize to 3rd world countries has gone very very wrong.

      just leave them alone. we *DON'T* know better.

  • Alternative? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sideslash ( 1865434 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @08:09PM (#48374613)
    Perhaps the alternative is seeds for fragile crops that will die in a drought and never yield much despite access to cheap chemical fertilizers? Look, I get that it's fun to hate on "Big Ag", but I also get that hippies are fond of biting the hand that feeds them. And Big Ag doesn't just feed hippies, it feeds the world, and there currently isn't any good substitute for it.

    Instead of disparaging charitable works in Africa that a rational person will perceive to be doing good to feed hungry people, why don't you focus on donating money to promote "open source" crop lines somewhere in the States so there are good alternatives to give to Africa and the rest of the world? Put your money where your mouth is (in a couple of senses).
    • This is very much the case. Much of west Africa (Ghana in particular is mentioned in TFS) alternates between "too wet" and "too dry". In the dry season, the winds from the Sahara leave farmland covered in moisture-sapping dust, which isn't particularly fertile when the wet season comes, but it sure is good for letting the water run away downhill.

      The best chance a farmer has is to have mostly-level farmland where he can control the runoff, to lengthen the short ideal growing season. There's not much land tha

    • They don't even need "open source crop lines", whatever that is. The best alternative, least likely to be applied, is for them to lay down their damn weapons. They already produce enough food to feed themselves. Most of it rots in warehouses, waiting for a higher price, or for lack of transport, or the truck's been hijacked. Your "charitable organizations" are only creating a dependency situation for profit.

      • Your "charitable organizations" are only creating a dependency situation for profit.

        The 4H? Seriously?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Khyber ( 864651 )

      " And Big Ag doesn't just feed hippies, it feeds the world, and there currently isn't any good substitute for it."

      Bullshit. We have plenty of alternatives to chemical-intensive agriculture. From vertical farming methods to advanced hydroponics methods that can reduce water AND nutrient requirements by 95% and 60% respectively.

      ~former research director for international horticultural company

      • " And Big Ag doesn't just feed hippies, it feeds the world, and there currently isn't any good substitute for it."

        Bullshit. We have plenty of alternatives to chemical-intensive agriculture. From vertical farming methods to advanced hydroponics methods that can reduce water AND nutrient requirements by 95% and 60% respectively.

        ~former research director for international horticultural company

        How about cost effective alternatives? Methods that don't require the poor starve to death because your sci-fi bullshiat costs so much compared to planting seed in a field.

        If your alternatives really were cost effective alternatives, where are the large scale operations producing food and selling it for less than the "chemical-intensive agriculture"?

      • Yes, there are plenty of crazy-ass ways to grow food that reduce water and nutrient requirements... but they don't work in the real world. In my back yard I can afford to have my crop crash one year because my crazy food plot experiment failed. In Africa, you die. There is no government safety net for your family to fall into. They'll die to. You need crops that will grow no matter what. They need to grow in drought, in flood, survive pests, survive in poor soil. For that you need GMO/Fertilizers/Pesticides

    • There is more to GM seeds than short-term feeding of people.

      There's the patents - putting too much power in the hands of a handful of people. In the end we may be stuck with eating Soylent Green.

      Then there's the problem of plants grown from hybrid seeds, which do not produce viable seeds themselves, so you have to buy seeds every time. You can't use seeds you harvest from your own crops any more. Cross-breeding between hybrid and traditional strains (this will happen, if only accidentally) introduces these

    • I don't think this is hating on Big Ag so much as reporting on a surprising aspect of 4H, of which my family has been involved for years. It's not a bad thing to have information, and it isn't necessarily "hating."
  • because hybrid seeds are bred for intensive agriculture, they typically need chemicals to thrive

    ...unlike natural, free-range grains that are invulnerable to pests and thrive under the gentle light of the waxing crescent moon. Sorry, but you lost me at "chemicals". Yes. They're matter-based lifeforms, and need a whole slew of chemicals to exist.

    • Chemicals! (Score:4, Funny)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @08:17PM (#48374663)

      Chemicals are *everywhere*, in all of our food, and many will kill you! I only eat chemical-free food, mainly neutrons and assorted leptons.

      • Well, if your assortment of leptons includes positrons, some of them will hit the neutrons and undergo inverse beta decay, and then the electrons in your Mixed Lepton Soup will bind with them and make atoms, and then chemistry. So you're not safe.

    • by Khyber ( 864651 )

      I would mod you up so much if I hadn't already posted.

      It is about time bullshit journalism and marketing got castrated.

  • Hybrids (Score:2, Troll)

    by hibiki_r ( 649814 )

    Sure, hybrid corn gets weaker by the generation, but it's also far higher yielding.

    American farmers buy it because they make more money buying seeds every year than they would saving seeds. Thinking that farmers from Ghana will not be able to make a rational decision between buying industrial seed every year or saving whatever strain they have already from year to year is a not so subtle form of racism.

    • by cduffy ( 652 )

      Thinking that farmers from Ghana will not be able to make a rational decision between buying industrial seed every year or saving whatever strain they have already from year to year is a not so subtle form of racism.

      Or maybe what is or isn't rational varies based on local conditions. Capital availability is a concern. Distribution infrastructure (and differences in cost based on same) is a concern.

      Ghana is one of the best-governed countries in its region, but even so, there's still an infrastructure gap --

    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      Thinking that farmers from Ghana will not be able to make a rational decision between buying industrial seed every year or saving whatever strain they have already from year to year is a not so subtle form of racism.

      Now that you've made your mind about it, why don't you go read the actual article, and more about the issue.

      Its far more complicated issue than a simple price per yield, with aspects of the ethics of using 4H as free advertising for Dupont, with the consideration that the money paid to Dupont fo

      • That the Dupont corn is considered tastier thereby, and that yeilds with it being higher mean increased total supply. These factors combine to drive down the price of local variety and make farming it a losing proprosition over time too.

        So, the Dupont corn tastes better & produces more edible grain. Enough so that the local competition is a "losing proposition".

        And this is bad, why?

        Do keep in mind that industrialization pretty much requires that you get some of those farmers out of the fields and int

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          The problem comes in if in a couple of years the DuPont seed is not readily available, perhaps due to war or perhaps just a corporate decision to raise prices above what is locally affordable.
          Always stupid to be too dependent on an entity across the sea who doesn't give a fuck about you.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Big Agriculture", and not "Big Silver". I thought this was about mining silver in Africa.

  • Proprietary seeds are an obvious trap. Perhaps it lets produce more, but they are expensive, and if farmer have to take debt for it, they become dependent on international market price for the goods the produce. If it drops, they are toasted. It will drop at some time.
    • People that say things like this have never been to Africa. These farmers don't have debt. There's no one on earth that'd give them a loan. The likelihood of them dieing in the next 12 months is higher than them defaulting on a loan. Yes, there are countries where farmers have big enough farms that they end out taking out loans for seeds and going into debt. If we could actually get Africa to that point? We'd have already worked a miracle and can start worrying about the debt problems.

  • This is bad (Score:5, Funny)

    by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @08:53PM (#48374827)

    I've never owned a farm.
    I've never planted or harvested a crop.
    I've never used fertilizer.
    I've never seen GMO seeds.
    I've never gone a day without food.
    I've never been to Africa.

    But I know this is really bad.

    Sent from my iPhone

    • I've never owned a farm.
      I've never planted or harvested a crop.
      I've never used fertilizer.
      I've never seen GMO seeds.
      I've never gone a day without food.
      I've never been to Africa.

      But I know this is really bad.

      Sent from my iPhone

      You don't know anything about the topic, and aren't involved or affected, but you're going to pass judgement on other people's choices.

    • No one has said it's bad. I participate in a huge fundraiser for my county 4H each year, and much of the money goes to international programs. I never knew that 4H was involved in a program like this. The point is to have information, and maybe to ask more questions. Information is never a bad thing. And do the farmers know what the long term cost of the seeds are? Seems to me they should be told. This is much like Nestle giving out formula to maternity wards, getting new mothers to feed their babies formul
  • Technology can be used for good and feed the world. DuPont wants to focus their efforts in assuring that they monetize their tweaks to nature's developments, even at the cost of others' lives or prosperity. When you put more effort into sterile plants that require chemicals than towards nutrition and human survival than you should not be permitted to enter the world food market. Its criminal extortion plain and simple. I guess DuPont's Napalm sales are down so this is another bad use of science.
    • by silfen ( 3720385 )

      Of course they only care about the money; that's what corporations are supposed to do.

      (I mean, could you please make up your mind whether you want corporations to engage in politics or not? Sometimes you want corporations to get drawn and quartered if they as much as utter a squeak on social or political issues, at other times, you whine and complain that "they only care about the money".)

      When you put more effort into sterile plants that require chemicals than towards nutrition and human survival than you s

      • by Bob_Who ( 926234 )

        Of course they only care about the money; that's what corporations are supposed to do.

        (I mean, could you please make up your mind whether you want corporations to engage in politics or not? Sometimes you want corporations to get drawn and quartered if they as much as utter a squeak on social or political issues, at other times, you whine and complain that "they only care about the money".)

        When you put more effort into sterile plants that require chemicals than towards nutrition and human survival than you should not be permitted to enter the world food market. Its criminal extortion plain and simple.

        How is anybody forcing you to buy their plants? If you think that non-sterile, non GMO crops are a better deal, just buy those instead. Where is the "criminal extortion"?

        This is not marketed to me, but their seed is contaminating the gene pool in African seeds via the subsistence farmers who wind up trying to use them.

        If you think that its OK to screw over people to make a buck then I really don't need to elaborate further on the ethics involved.

  • A few years ago, this was started: http://www.opensourceseediniti... [opensource...iative.org]

    For some reason they haven't spread into Africa - but are all over North America/Europe in a large way, someone needs to start providing higher quality seed options for the poorest farmers of the world rather than leave the door wide open for obvious pillagers like most of the shameless extortionists in the Big Ag industry. Once they convince people of the higher yields and lock them in, ah.. one of the saddest things in the world - and see

    • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

      How are they locked in? Can they not go back to using traditional seed? Or do you mean they're locked in by the better value?

    • by silfen ( 3720385 )

      forced-repurchase

      How is the repurchase "forced"? How are they "locked in"? They can go back to regular crops at any time they choose.

      • Do some research before you make stupid statements that show you don't understand the issue.

        If farmers do want to go back to normal seeds - *once their contract with Monsanto is up* - they typically have to wait an average of 7 years and use a lot of round-up on the soil before growing non-GMO. That's pretty much locked in, no?

        "any time they choose" -- not in this reality.

  • by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Wednesday November 12, 2014 @10:53PM (#48375397)

    "the sustainable-farming nonprofit Genetic Resources Action International"

    Yea, that's an unbiased and science based organization right there.

  • Hybrids have been around officially for over 200 years, unofficially 5000.
    It's called selective breeding. It's been going on since man discovered agriculture.
    Hybrids loosing effectiveness in subsequent generations, is a well known problem. It's not something engineered in by man. Mother nature is a bitch,

    This isn't Monsanto enforcing a patent for their GMO seeds, that do spread that gene.
    These are hybrid seeds, with no GMO genes. They've just been carefully selected.
    Many hybrids are mules. Look at seedless grapes. The desired hybrid can't reproduce.

    The post is a bit skewed, the text for the link to the story tells the story. The author has an agenda.
  • by WorBlux ( 1751716 ) on Thursday November 13, 2014 @01:18AM (#48375993)
    "hybrid seeds get weaker by the generation" -- False, there is a level of heterzygosity that the population with stablize at. The second generation takes the biggest hit and after you can get up to 2/3 of the yeild for most hybrids of corn. " hybrid seeds are bred for intensive agriculture, they typically need chemicals to thrive." Hybrid seeds can be bred for whatever purpose you want, including low-input agriculture. Even said selecting artificial populations would be most benificial to many of the farmers as you can effectively replant

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