PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For More Information:
November 25, 2021 Contact Dr. Benbrook at
208-263-5236 or via e-mail
benbrook@hillnet.com
Genetically Engineered Crops Now Increasing
Pesticide Use in the United States
The planting of 550
million acres of genetically engineered (GE) corn, soybeans
and cotton in the United States since 1996 has increased pesticide
use by about 50 million pounds, according to a report leased today
by the
Northwest Science and Environmental Policy Center.
The report is the
first comprehensive study of the impacts of all major commercial GE
crops on pesticide use in the United States over the
first eight years of commercial use, 1996-2003. It draws on official
U.S.
Department of Agriculture data on pesticide use by crop and state.
The report is entitled" Impacts of Genetically Engineered Crops on Pesticide Use in the United
prepared for Ag BioTech InfoNet. It is being published today via the
Internet (hard copies will not be provided, but can be printed for
free from
the website).
The report calculates
the difference between the average pounds of pesticides applied on
acres planted to GE crops compared to the pounds
applied to otherwise similar conventional crops. In their first three
years
of commercial sales (1996-1998), GE crops reduced pesticide use by
about 25.4 million pounds but in the last three years (2001-2003),
over 73
million
more pounds of pesticides were applied on GE acres.
Substantial increases in herbicide
use on "Herbicide Tolerant" (HT)
crops,
especially soybeans, accounted for the increase in pesticide use on
GE acres
compared to acres planted to conventional plant varieties. Many farmers
have
had to spray incrementally more herbicides on GE acres in order to
keep up
with shifts in weeds toward tougher-to-control species, coupled with
the
emergence of genetic resistance in certain weed populations.
"For years weed
scientists have warned that heavy reliance on herbicide
tolerant crops would trigger ecological changes in farm fields that
would incrementally erode the technology's effectiveness. It now appears
that this
process began in 2001 in the United States in the case of herbicide
tolerant crops," according to Benbrook.
The report concludes
that the other major category of GE crops, corn and
cotton engineered to produce the natural insecticide Bacillus thuringiensis
( Bt) in plant cells, continues to reduce insecticide use by 2 million
to
2.5 million pounds annually. The increase in herbicide use on HT crop
acres,
however, far exceeds the modest reductions in insecticide use on acres
planted to Bt crops, especially since 2001.
The 46-page report
is posted on Ag BioTech InfoNet at -- http://wwww.biotech-info.net/technicalpaper6.html
Dr. Benbrook has
a PhD. in agricultural economics and has carried out several studies
on the impacts of genetically engineered crops on farming
systems and costs and the environment. He directs the Northwest Science
and
Environmental Policy Center, which is based in Sandpoint, Idaho. From
1984
through 1990, he served as the Executive Director of the National Academy
of
Sciences Board on Agriculture.
Financial and in-kind support for this study was provided by:
The Union of Concerned Scientists;
The Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture, Iowa State University;
Consumer Policy Institute, Consumers Union;
The Center for Food Safety;
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy; and
The Organic Farming Research Foundation.
