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Transgenic
Maize in Mexico: Two Updates
by Doreen
Stabinsky
CONTAMINATED COMMUNITIES RESPOND
The Mexican governments announcement in September 2001 that
transgenic sequences had contaminated traditional corn (maize) varieties
in isolated mountain communities in Oaxaca surprised the world.
Because of the value of these traditional varieties for agricultural
breeding programs, and indeed for all present and future consumers
of maize, in 1998 the Mexican government placed a countrywide moratorium
on the growing of transgenic maize. That transgenes could contaminate
traditional varieties even during a planting moratorium was shocking.
The transgenic contamination was first
discovered months before the September announcement when indigenous
communities in Oaxaca wanted to certify their maize as sustainably
produced, a distinction they had already been allowed for the wood
harvested from their forests. To the surprise of the communities,
their organically produced traditional varieties tested positive
for transgenic sequences. After this discovery, UC Berkeley researchers
David Quist and Ignacio Chapela started scientific studies on the
contaminated maize. The researchers also informed the Mexican environmental
ministry, which began its own investigation.
Indigenous communities throughout the
state of Oaxaca are troubled by the findings. They have worked as
stewards of maize diversity for millennia, and they understand the
importance of this work to the rest of the world. To find their
traditional varieties contaminated without their knowledge is disturbing
enough. Even more alarming to the community members are the unknown
health effects of the transgenic corn on their children and their
childrens children.
The communities also express concern
about the effects of the transgenic maize on biological diversity
in general. The contaminating transgene is likely to be the Bt gene,
which codes for an insecticidal toxin (preliminary reports from
Mexico confirm that the Bt gene is present and expressing protein
in some of the contaminated samples). This transgene is well known
for its impacts on Monarchs and other butterfly and moth (lepidopteran)
species. Scientists in Switzerland have also detailed the impacts
of Bt-maize on the natural enemies of pests that eat the transgenic
crop. Because of the myriad of ecosystems in Mexico in which the
contaminated maize might be found, the potential ecological impacts
are impossible to predict.
The indigenous communities, working
with an environmental law firm in Mexico, drafted a legal request
to the North American Free Trade Agreement Commission for Environmental
Cooperation (NAFTA-CEC), and filed it with the CEC in April 2002.
The CEC was established by an environmental side agreement adopted
at the time of the NAFTA agreement. The Commission has broad responsibilities
(but limited enforcement power) to ensure that environmental laws
are enforced in the three NAFTA countries. The legal request from
the Oaxacan communities asks the CEC to investigate the impacts
of maize contamination in three general areas:
-- Impacts on maize diversity
-- Impacts on broader biological diversity
-- Economic impacts of loss of markets
POLITICAL ATTACK ON PUBLIC SCIENTISTS
Controversy continues to surround the
scientific documentation of the contamination by Quist and Chapela
in Nature magazine. Both scientific and personal attacks against
the scientists began almost immediately after the initial publication
of the results in November 2001. Internet criticism of them and
their work was coordinated by the pro-biotech website AgBioWorld,
and its associated scientists. Nature magazine was heavily lobbied
against the original publication both before and after publication,
and at the beginning of April, the magazine published two letters
that were critical of one of the conclusions made by Quist and Chapela.
Notably, no one took issue with the
most important finding: that contaminating transgenic sequences
-were found in the traditional varieties of maize in Oaxaca. Instead,
the scientific criticism concerned the second of Quist and Chapelas
findings: that the transgenic sequences were inserted in various
parts of the maize genome, and that they were fragmented and appeared
to be mobile. However, even those controversial conclusions may
not have been the real reason for the critical letters. The majority
of the authors of the two critical letters have been involved in
a long-standing feud with Chapela and Quist. The other authors are
their graduate students. All are from UC Berkeley or have a connection
to Berkeley.
There may be two historical reasons
for the criticisms that made their way onto Natures Letters
page: Chapela was chair of the UC Berkeley College of Natural Resources
executive committee at the time that its Department of Plant Biology
was negotiating the infamous deal with Novartis, whereby UC Berkeley
sold to this transnational corporation first rights of access to
all results of departmental research for five years, in exchange
for $25 million. Chapela was quite critical of the deal, and as
chair of the colleges executive committee, he conducted a
survey of faculty opinions on the contract. As a result, he was
not popular with the proponents of the UC Berkeley-Novartis partnership
including some authors of the Nature letters.
The second reason: around the time of
the deal, there was a crop pull (a direct action in which activists
pull up and destroy genetically engineered plants) by local activists
of genetically engineered corn, which belonged to a student working
in the lab of one of the major proponents of the deal. At the time,
someone accused Quist of being the crop puller, though those charges
were never substantiated.
Who were the letter writers? One letter
has two authors the first, Matthew Metz, was a graduate student
at Berkeley at the time of the Novartis deal and a vocal proponent
of genetic engineering and is currently a scientist associated with
AgBioWorld. The other author is a scientist in Switzerland, seemingly
unconnected to the UC Berkeley controversy. However, he works in
the current laboratory of Wilhelm Gruissem, who was chair of the
UC Berkeley Department of Plant Biology at the time of the Novartis
deal, and, some say, was the behind-the-scenes architect of the
entire project.
The other letter had several authors:
a UC Berkeley faculty member who was a major proponent of the Novartis
deal and the first recipient of a grant from the Novartis money;
his graduate student the one whose corn was trashed by the
croppers; the director of the Plant Gene Expression Center, another
proponent whose corn was also trashed according to some reports;
and a few other graduate students.
Conclusions
The observation that transgenic sequences
were found in traditional Mexican maize varieties remains virtually
uncontested. In fact, the Mexican National Institute of Ecology
will soon publish its results confirming the contamination and documenting
an even wider geographical involvement than Quist and Chapela did.
Yet, two key questions about the contaminated Mexican maize remain
unanswered; these questions are sure to define the future scientific
and political debates on the issue. What can be done now that Mexicos
corn is contaminated? And, will the companies responsible for this
genetic pollution be held responsible?
Doreen Stabinsky, PhD, is a Professor
of Environmental Politics at College of the Atlantic, Science Advisor
for Greenpeace USA and Greenpeace International, and a CRG board
member. Her research focuses on the international politics of genetic
engineering in forums such as the Cartegena Protocol on Biosafety,
the World Trade Organization, and the Food and Agriculture Organization.
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