An airplane sprays soya crop fields in Argentina . Increased herbicide use leads to an increase in herbicide-resistant weeds, known as 'super weeds'.
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It is not true that GE is a ‘green’ technology, which allows farmers to use less herbicides.
The myth that GE allows farmers to use less herbicides, is one of the most successful myths promoted by the genetic
engineering industry.
But the reality is quite different. 70% of the GE
crops in the field are engineered to withstand high doses of toxic
herbicides. Application of toxic chemicals is actually a necessity with
these crops, while techniques that truly move farmers away from
chemical use fall to the wayside.
Since 1996 the cultivation of GE
crops in the US has led to a dramatic increase in toxic herbicide use
of 122 million pounds (55 million KG).
In Argentina, the second biggest producer of GE crops in the world, the
cultivation of GE soya has also led to massive deforestation.
All the
trees knocked down by bulldozers are discarded onto huge piles, often
kilometres long, and set alight. The cleared land can only support the
GE soya monoculture for a few years before the soil nutrients
disappear.
The social consequences of GE cultivation in the country
are just as devastating; small farmers and indigenous communities are
forcibly evicted from their land by government-supported GE Soya
landlords.
Many of the agro-chemical companies trying to convince the public that
GE organisms are good for the environment are actually concealing a
much different agenda: an effort to increase sales of herbicides owned
and marketed by the very same companies.