Date: 19 August 2002 10:51
Subject: ngin: Monsanto admits "numerous problems" with
transgenic pest control/Monsanto scales down GM food hopes
Norfolk Genetic Information Network (ngin),
http://www.ngin.org.uk
---
Monsanto's patents admit transgenic pest control (as in Bt corn
and Bt
cotton) "may not be desirable in the long term" because
it produces
resistant strains and "numerous problems remain...under
actual field
conditions". (quotes from item 1)
1. GM plants no panacea
2. Monsanto scales down GM food hopes
---
1. New Scientist August 17, 2002 Vol. 175; Pg. 22
GM plants no panacea
Barry Fox
Opponents of GM technology will surely pounce on new patents from
the US
agrichemicals company Monsanto which admits that genetically
engineering
plants to resist pests is not a panacea. Novartis has already had
doubts
(New Scientist, 18 December 1999, p 5) and now Monsanto's patents
(W0
02/28184/5) admit even more frankly that transgenic pest control
"may
not be desirable in the long term" because it produces
resistant strains
and "numerous problems remain...under actual field
conditions". So
they're going for a belt-and-braces approach. Monsanto will now
bioengineer maize to release endotoxins, but also treat the maize
seed
with the pesticides clothianidin and thiamethoxam. This, says
Monsanto,
has a synergistic effect with the endotoxin, giving increased
resistance
to corn rootworm.
---
Monsanto scales down GM food hopes
LONDON, Aug 19 (Reuters) - U.S. biotechnology company Monsanto
(MON)
accepted it could take until at least 2005 to gain regulatory
approval
in Europe or Brazil for its genetically modified products, the
Financial
Times said on Monday.
Chief Executive Hendrik Verfaillie told the paper Monsanto needed
to be
more transparent about its growth assumptions.
"We are assuming no progress in Europe until 2005...We are
trying to be
conservative. It is better to under-promise than under-deliver, I
have
learned. I don't like earnings revisions, they are painful,"
he said.
The paper said Monsanto's difficulties in the face of hostility
from
environmental groups to GM foods and the pressures on governments
to
stop their production could prompt rivals such as DuPont (DD) and
Syngenta (SYNZN) to rethink plans for expansion outside the U.S.
More than a dozen genetically modified crop varieties have been
in
regulatory limbo in Europe since 1998 when six European Union
governments, led by France, said they would not allow any new
genetically modified organisms into the 15-nation EU until tough
rules
on testing, labeling and tracing were put in place.
Companies such as Monsanto have been waiting for years to know
whether
their new strains of modified maize, soy and cotton can be sold
in the
EU.
Separately, the chief executive addressed fears of a further
writedown
of its Latin American operations.
"We have taken very aggressive actions and believe these
will be
sufficient," he said.
Monsanto is also trying to manage the decline of its flagship
product,
RoundUp herbicide. It warned that if the falls in price or volume
of
RoundUp "deviate significantly from our previous experience,
we will
need to consider additional changes to our business model".
Monsanto's parent Pharmacia, the U.S. drugs company, last week
spun off
its 84 per cent stake in the group to its shareholders.
©2002 Reuters Limited.