Tuesday, April 02, 2013

Monsanto's monopoly on seeds in India are the root cause behind the sharp increase in suicides...

(...)

Five things changed with Monsanto's entry. First, Indian companies were locked into joint ventures and licensing arrangements, and concentration over the seed sector increased. In the case of cotton, Monsanto now controls 95 percent of the cotton seed market through its GMOs. Second, seed which had been the farmers' common resource became the "intellectual property" of Monsanto, for which it started collecting royalties thus raising the costs of seed. Third, open-pollinated cotton seeds were displaced by hybrids, including GMO hybrids. A renewable resource became a non-renewable patented commodity. Fourth, cotton which had earlier been grown as a mixture with food crops now had to be grown as a monoculture, with higher vulnerability to pests, disease, drought and crop failure. Finally, Monsanto started to subvert India's regulatory processes, and in fact started to use public resources to push its non-renewable hybrids and GMOs through so-called public private partnerships (PPP).

(...)

I have always been critical of reductionism. I look at systems, and at contextual causation. It is this system that Monsanto has created of seed monopoly, crop monocultures and a context of debt, dependency and distress - which is driving the farmers' suicide epidemic in India. This systemic control has been intensified with Bt cotton. That is why most suicides are in the cotton belt. The highest acreage of Bt cotton is Maharashtra, and this is also where the highest farm suicides are. According to P Sainath, who has covered farmer suicides extensively: "The total number of farmers who have taken their own lives in Maharashtra since 1995 is closing in on 54,000. Of these, 33,752 have occurred in nine years since 2003, at an annual average of 3,750. The figure for 1995-2002 was 20,066 at an average of 2,508." Suicides have increased after Bt cotton was introduced. The price of seed jumped 8,000 percent; Monsanto's royalty extraction and the high costs of purchased seed and chemicals have created a debt trap. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Farmer suicides in India...
  2. Indian farmers trapped and desperate...
  3. India's rice revolution...
  4. An evening with Vandana Shiva...
  5. Mobile phones save Indian farmers from crop losses...
  6. Waves of suicides among Indian famers...
  7. Monsanto official beaten up in India over failed GMO cotton seeds...
  8. 17,368 farmer suicides in 2009 in India, a total of 216,500 since 1997...

No comments:

Post a Comment