Thanks to our now-globalized food system, many of us in the Western world take
for granted that we can stroll into a supermarket and purchase anything from
asparagus to cinnamon rolls to chocolate-flavored beer — all of which seem to be
available all the time.
But for this to continue to be possible, we need a stable climate — which humans
have been lucky enough to have had for the last 12,000
years or
so. Unfortunately, we have entered the
Anthropocene —
an era in which we now face the many repercussions of centuries of
climate-destabilizing industrial
activities.
Can science rescue our food?
Many food crops can only grow under certain climate conditions, which means too
little or too much heat or rainfall can spoil entire harvests. So far in 2024,
record-breaking floods and
heatwaves
have devastated parts of the United States, Europe, Asia and
Brazil. Oddly enough, droughts are also becoming more commonplace — adding
the potential for a drop in crop yields and a boost in food prices across the
globe.
A possible solution is to genetically modify crops to make them more resistant
to these ever-increasing climate
shocks.
Genetically modified foods, also known as genetically modified organisms
(GMOs), have long been the subject of controversy as many consumers fear
they may have negative effects on human health. But over 100 research
studies by
everyone from the American Medical Association to the World Health
Organization, have found that such fears are widely unfounded and that
genetically modified foods are safe for
consumers.
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As Karen Massel, research
fellow for the University of Queensland’s Centre for Crop
Science, expressed in The
Conversation
in 2023: “There’s no reason to suggest tweaking the gene sequences [of many
plants and animals we eat] will make consumption harmful. Moreover, there’s
currently no evidence regulator-approved GMOs or gene-edited
foods
aren’t safe for human consumption.”
Genetically modified food comes from plants whose DNA has been changed by
scientists with the goal of creating desired traits. This can mean adding just
one gene from another plant that is closely related.
GM crops can be engineered to be more resistant to droughts in comparison to
conventional crops, by making them strong enough to flourish with a fraction of
the water required by non-GMO crops. They can also be made to resist pests and
diseases —
which could greatly reduce the need for toxic, environmentally damaging
pesticides.
With regards to excess rain, an international
collaboration
that included researchers from Argentina’s National University of La
Plata and The Netherlands’ Utrecht University — funded by the
National Science Foundation’s Plant Genome Research
Program
— found that some crops can also be genetically modified to resist the floods,
which are also becoming more ubiquitous throughout the globe.
GMOs and land use
Apart from being able to flourish even under increasingly erratic climate
conditions, there’s evidence to suggest genetically modified food crops could
also potentially help mitigate the environmental impact of food production.
About 31 percent of all the
human-induced greenhouse gas emissions are from food production, much of which
is in the form of land use. Since conventional crops do not always survive until
harvest, more land must be used to produce more crops — which often means more
carbon-storing forests are
destroyed
to make room for more food crops. But some studies suggest genetically modified
crops also produce higher
yields —
which translates to the need for less land when compared to non-genetically
modified crops, potentially freeing up space for the replanting of trees that
sequester carbon, provide habitats for wildlife and produce oxygen.
Potential ripple effects for biodiversity
Although it appears GM crops have several significant, potential benefits, they
also have the potential to create unintended domino effects for natural
ecosystems — such as stimulating the growth of herbicide-tolerant
weeds
— in the long term. GM crops have also been associated with a net increase in
the use of
herbicides
in some crops in certain parts of the world.
Genetic modification has also been shown to negatively impact non-target
organisms, as well as soil and water ecosystems. In one
example,
corn and soy genetically modified to resist herbicides in North
America resulted in the destruction of wide swaths of habitat of the monarch
butterfly — a critical
pollinator: While the corn
and soy flourished, herbicides killed off non-resistant plants between rows of
GM crops — including milkweed, a plant on which monarchs exclusively rely
for food and for laying their eggs — illustrating the type of unintended
consequences to ecosystem health we risk with genetic modification.
A holistic, climate-stable approach to food production
However we proceed, it’s clear we must learn on the fly — as our rapidly
changing climate presents an ever more pressing threat to both human health and
the health of our global food supply.
Even the University of Queensland’s Karen Massel, who
advocates
for scaling the use of GM food crops, admits that “there are valid concerns”
including “unintended consequences for ecosystems” — adding that “the development
of future foods must be guided by a commitment to sustainability, social justice
and scientific rigor.”
While there are still many unknowns regarding the long-term impacts of GMOs,
their potential benefits merit another look before climate change takes an
irreversible toll on our food system.
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Roberto Guerra is a bilingual writer, editor, entrepreneur, corporate engagement and communications specialist, and US Air Force veteran with a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from Universidad de la Sabana (Bogota, Colombia) and an International Master in Sustainable Development and Corporate Responsibility from EOI Business School (Madrid, Spain). Born in New York and raised in Florida, Roberto is former managing director for the Spanish-language version of vegan business magazine "vegconomist" and is also author of three novels. He has lived, worked and studied on four different continents.
Published May 22, 2024 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST