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A perfect storm in the cotton field
Context
Why India is the only Bt cotton-growing country facing the problem of pink bollworm infestation
The issue: Pink bollworm’s resistance to Bollgard 2
- Bollgard 2, or BG-2, Monsanto’s second generation insecticidal technology for cotton, was supposed to protect crops against the pink bollworm, the pest has grown resistant to the toxins produced by this trait
- Farmers now spend more on pesticides to control infestations
- This, along with the high cost of Bt seeds, is driving farmers to indigence.
No other country faced this problem
- They mainly grow open-pollinated cotton varieties rather than hybrids
- They strictly terminate the crop within 160 days
Why the problem is unique to India
The pink bollworm grew resistant because India restricted itself to cultivating long-duration hybrids since the introduction of Bt cotton in 2002
What are Hybrids?
Hybrids are crosses between two crops that often see higher yields than their parents, in a genetic phenomenon called heterosis
Reasons:
- Traits were restricted to hybrids only: When Monsanto licensed its BG and BG-2 traits to Indian seed companies, the agreement restricted the introduction of these traits to hybrids only.
- Hemizygous hybrids:
- Introduction of the Bt gene into only one parent of Indian hybrids results in hemizygous hybrids, which means that they express only one copy of the Bt gene
- So, they produce cotton bolls that have some seeds toxic to the pink bollworm and some that are not
- This can be contrasted with the homozygous seeds of open-pollinated varieties in the U.S., China or Australia, which have 100% toxic seeds.
- Problem: Hemizygous hybrids allow pink bollworms to survive on toxin-free seeds when they are vulnerable newborns (although only a hypothesis till now)
- Hybrids more profitable to companies:
- Hybrids are financially more attractive to Indian seed companies because they offer a “value capture mechanism”
- Hybrids lose their genetic stability when their seeds are replanted
- This compels farmers to repurchase seeds each year, protecting corporate revenues.
- Shifting to Bt cotton all together:
- As there was no open-pollinated Bt option, the farmers were forced to shift en masse to hybrids
- From 2002 to 2011, the area under cotton hybrids rose from 2% in north India and 40% elsewhere to 96% across the country.
Effect of this shift:
- Low density cultivation: Not only are hybrids expensive, they are also bigger and bushier, forcing farmers to cultivate them at low densities
- Result:To make up for these low densities longer duration is needed for the cotton crop which in turn gives more time to the pest to develop resistance
Proposed Solution
- Only solution to the problem is to move swiftly to short-duration varieties
- Seed companies cannot develop open-pollinated varieties with BG-2, but they can with BG, since Monsanto didn’t patent BG in India
Arguments against the above proposed solution
- Even if BG-2 doesn’t fend off the pink bollworm, it still protects against other pests like the tobacco cutworm and the American bollworm
- The presence of two Bt genes in BG-2 means it will be more effective than BG in delaying resistance against these pests.
Questions raised
When the whole world is moving to BG-3, why do we want to go back in time?
Even if the government incentivizes a return to BG, will all seed companies stop making BG-2 seeds?
Both BG and BG-2 can’t be cultivated together
If India cultivates both BG and BG-2, simultaneously, that can accelerate resistance among pests, studies predict. This could trigger the emergence of new cotton pests.
Conclusion
India erred by not clamping down on long-duration crops when Bt cotton was first introduced. At least now it must base its policy on sound science and implement it stringently