Terminator
Terminated?
see other terminator
technology articles 1, 2,
4 & 5
In our 2000 catalog
we reported on Monsanto’s much-ballyhooed public commitment
not to commercialize Terminator seeds. You may have believed that
was the death knell of the Terminator. Don’t bet on it!
Terminator technology, by creating genetically
altered varieties that produce sterile seed, would make seed-saving
by farmers impossible. Although it is still several years away from
commercialization, research and development continue.
Monsanto’s disclaimer means nothing because
Monsanto doesn’t even own the patent. In December, 1999 Monsanto
withdrew its $1.8 billion takeover bid of Delta & Pine Land,
leaving the world’s largest cotton seed company and the USDA
as joint patent-holders. Neither has disavowed the technology. In
fact, the USDA holds two other Terminator patents, while D &
PL Vice-President of Technology Transfer Harry Collins was quoted
earlier this year, “We’ve continued right on with work
on the Technology Protection System (Terminator). We never really
slowed down. We’re on target, moving ahead to commercialize
it.”
Plant breeder Carol Deppe, in the new edition
of her book Breed Your Own Vegetable Varieties (#9635 in our book
section), predicts seed companies will be unable to resist the lure
of Terminator Technology and argues that we must outlaw it as a
criminal offense involving serious prison time. “I view terminator
technology as the genetic engineering version of poisoning wells.
Those who develop terminator technology may have some legitimate
purposes they think they are trying to serve. So, undoubtedly, did
most of those who poisoned wells.”
Research by RAFI has revealed that all of the
major seed industry behemoths, including Monsanto, Novartis, AstraZeneca,
DuPont, BASF, and Aventis, have similar patents in the works. The
next generation of technologies will create packages which, induced
by proprietary chemical activators, can control multiple factors
such as acceleration or stunting of plant growth, reproductive viability,
and disease or herbicide resistance. The aim of the gene giants
is not just to discourage seed saving or replanting but to make
farmers totally dependent on the seed company, and ultimately to
control the entire food system from seed to table. Terminator is
only the most visible and dramatic manifestation of the potential
impact of genetic engineering on our lives. |