New York Times Magazine
October 25, 1998
Planting
Today I planted something new in my vegetable garden -- something very new, as a matter of fact. It's a potato called the New Leaf Superior, which has been genetically engineered -- by Monsanto, the chemical giant recently turned ''life sciences'' giant -- to produce its own insecticide. This it can do in every cell of every leaf, stem, flower, root and (here's the creepy part) spud. The scourge of potatoes has always been the Colorado potato beetle, a handsome and voracious insect that can pick a plant clean of its leaves virtually overnight. Any Colorado potato beetle that takes so much as a nibble of my New Leafs will supposedly keel over and die, its digestive tract pulped, in effect, by the bacterial toxin manufactured in the leaves of these otherwise ordinary Superiors. (Superiors are the thin-skinned white spuds sold fresh in the supermarket.) You're probably wondering if I plan to eat these potatoes, or serve them to my family. That's still up in the air; it's only the first week of May, and harvest is a few months off.
Certainly my New Leafs are aptly named.
They're part of a new class of crop plants that is rapidly changing the
American food chain. This year, the fourth year that genetically altered
seed has been on the market, some 45 million acres of American farmland
have been planted with biotech crops, most of it corn, soybeans, cotton
and potatoes that have been engineered to either produce their own pesticides
or withstand herbicides. Though Americans have already begun to eat genetically
engineered potatoes, corn and soybeans, industry research confirms what
my own informal surveys suggest: hardly any of us knows it. The reason
is not hard to find. The biotech industry, with the concurrence of the
Food and Drug Administration, has decided we don't need to know it, so
biotech foods carry no identifying labels. In a dazzling feat of positioning,
the industry has succeeded in depicting these plants simultaneously as
the linchpins of a biological revolution -- part of a ''new agricultural
paradigm'' that will make farming more sustainable, feed the world and
improve health and nutrition -- and, oddly enough, as the same old stuff,
at least so far as those of us at the eating end of the food chain should
be concerned.
This convenient version of reality has
been roundly rejected by both consumers and farmers across the Atlantic.
Last summer, biotech food emerged as the most explosive environmental issue
in Europe. Protesters have destroyed dozens of field trials of the very
same ''frankenplants'' (as they are sometimes called) that we Americans
are already serving for dinner, and throughout Europe the public has demanded
that biotech food be labeled in the market.
By growing my own transgenic crop -- and
talking with scientists and farmers involved with biotech -- I hoped to
discover which of us was crazy. Are the Europeans overreacting, or is it
possible that we've been underreacting to genetically engineered food?
After digging two shallow trenches in
my garden and lining them with compost, I untied the purple mesh bag of
seed potatoes that Monsanto had sent and opened up the Grower Guide tied
around its neck. (Potatoes, you may recall from kindergarten experiments,
are grown not from seed but from the eyes of other potatoes.) The guide
put me in mind not so much of planting potatoes as booting up a new software
release. By ''opening and using this product,'' the card stated, I was
now ''licensed'' to grow these potatoes, but only for a single generation;
the crop I would water and tend and harvest was mine, yet also not mine.
That is, the potatoes I will harvest come August are mine to eat or sell,
but their genes remain the intellectual property of Monsanto, protected
under numerous United States patents, including Nos. 5,196,525, 5,164,316,
5,322,938 and 5,352,605. Were I to save even one of them to plant next
year --something I've routinely done with potatoes in the past -- I would
be breaking Federal law. The small print in the Grower Guide also brought
the news that my potato plants were themselves a pesticide, registered
with the Environmental Protection Agency.
If proof were needed that the intricate
industrial food chain that begins with seeds and ends on our dinner plates
is in the throes of profound change, the small print that accompanied my
New Leaf will do. That food chain has been unrivaled for its productivity
-- on average, a single American farmer today grows enough food each year
to feed 100 people. But this accomplishment has come at a price. The modern
industrial farmer cannot achieve such yields without enormous amounts of
chemical fertilizer, pesticide, machinery and fuel, a set of capital-intensive
inputs, as they're called, that saddle the farmer with debt, threaten his
health, erode his soil and destroy its fertility, pollute the ground water
and compromise the safety of the food we eat.
We've heard all this before, of course,
but usually from environmentalists and organic farmers; what is new is
to hear the same critique from conventional farmers, government officials
and even many agribusiness corporations, all of whom now acknowledge that
our food chain stands in need of reform. Sounding more like Wendell Berry
than the agribusiness giant it is, Monsanto declared in its most recent
annual report that ''current agricultural technology is not sustainable.''
What is supposed
to rescue the American food chain is biotechnology -- the replacement of
expensive and toxic chemical inputs with expensive but apparently benign
genetic information: crops that, like my New Leafs, can protect
themselves from insects and disease without being sprayed with pesticides.
With the advent of biotechnology, agriculture is entering the information
age, and more than any other company, Monsanto is positioning itself to
become its Microsoft, supplying the proprietary ''operating systems'' --
the metaphor is theirs -- to run this new generation of plants.
There is, of course, a second food chain
in America: organic agriculture. And while it is still only a fraction
of the size of the conventional food chain, it has been growing in leaps
and bounds -- in large part because of concerns over the safety of conventional
agriculture. Organic farmers have been among biotechnology's fiercest critics,
regarding crops like my New Leafs as inimical to their principles and,
potentially, a threat to their survival. That's because Bt, the bacterial
toxin produced in my New Leafs (and in many other biotech plants) happens
to be the same insecticide organic growers have relied on for decades.
Instead of being flattered by the imitation, however, organic farmers are
up in arms: the widespread use of Bt in biotech crops is likely to lead
to insect resistance, thus robbing organic growers of one of their most
critical tools; that is, Monsanto's version of sustainable agriculture
may threaten precisely those farmers who pioneered sustainable farming.
Sprouting
After several days of drenching rain,
the sun appeared on May 15, and so did my New Leafs. A dozen deep-green
shoots pushed up out of the soil and commenced to grow -- faster and more
robustly than any of the other potatoes in my garden. Apart from their
vigor, though, my New Leafs looked perfectly normal. And yet as I watched
them multiply their lustrous dark-green leaves those first few days, eagerly
awaiting the arrival of the first doomed beetle, I couldn't help thinking
of them as existentially different from the rest of my plants.
All domesticated plants are in some sense
artificial -- living archives of both cultural and natural information
that we in some sense ''design.'' A given type of potato reflects the values
we've bred into it -- one that has been selected to yield long, handsome
french fries or unblemished round potato chips is the expression of a national
food chain that likes its potatoes highly processed. At the same time,
some of the more delicate European fingerlings I'm growing alongside my
New Leafs imply an economy of small market growers and a taste for eating
potatoes fresh. Yet all these qualities already existed in the potato,
somewhere within the range of genetic possibilities presented by
Solanum tuberosum. Since distant species in nature cannot be crossed, the
breeder's art has always run up against a natural limit of what a potato
is willing, or able, to do. Nature, in effect, has exercised a kind of
veto on what culture can do with a potato.
My New Leafs are different. Although Monsanto
likes to depict biotechnology as just another in an ancient line of human
modifications of nature going back to fermentation, in fact genetic
engineering overthrows the old rules governing the relationship
of nature and culture in a plant. For the first time, breeders can bring
qualities from anywhere in nature into the genome of a plant -- from flounders
(frost tolerance), from viruses (disease resistance) and, in the case of
my potatoes, from Bacillus thuringiensis, the soil bacterium that produces
the organic insecticide known as Bt. The introduction into a plant of genes
transported not only across species but whole phyla means that the wall
of that plant's essential identity -- its irreducible wildness, you might
say -- has been breached.
But what is perhaps most astonishing about
the New Leafs coming up in my garden is the human intelligence that the
inclusion of the Bt gene represents. In the past, that intelligence resided
outside the plant, in the mind of the organic farmers who deployed Bt (in
the form of a spray) to manipulate the ecological relationship of certain
insects and a certain bacterium as a way to foil those insects. The irony
about the New Leafs is that the cultural information they encode happens
to be knowledge that resides in the heads of the very sort of people --
that is, organic growers -- who most distrust high technology.
One way to look at biotechnology is that
it allows a larger portion of human intelligence to be incorporated into
the plant itself. In this sense, my New Leafs are just plain smarter than
the rest of my potatoes. The others will depend on my knowledge and experience
when the Colorado potato beetles strike; the New Leafs, knowing what I
know about bugs and Bt, will take care of themselves. So while my biotech
plants might seem like alien beings, that's not quite right. They're more
like us than like other plants because there's more of us in them.
Growing
To find out how my potatoes got that way,
I traveled to suburban St. Louis in early June. My New Leafs are clones
of clones of plants that were first engineered seven years ago in Monsanto's
$150 million research facility, a long, low-slung brick building on the
banks of the Missouri that would look like any other corporate complex
were it not for the 26 greenhouses that crown its roof like shimmering
crenellations of glass.
Dave Stark, a molecular biologist and
co-director of Naturemark, Monsanto's potato subsidiary, escorted me through
the clean rooms where potatoes are genetically engineered. Technicians
sat at lab benches before petri dishes in which fingernail-size sections
of potato stem had been placed in a nutrient mixture. To this the technicians
added a solution of agrobacterium, a disease bacterium whose modus operandi
is to break into a plant cell's nucleus and insert some of its own DNA.
Essentially, scientists smuggle the Bt gene into the agrobacterium's payload,
and then the bacterium splices it into the potato's DNA. The technicians
also add a ''marker'' gene, a kind of universal product code that allows
Monsanto to identify its plants after they leave the lab.
A few days later, once the slips of potato
stem have put down roots, they're moved to the potato greenhouse up on
the roof. Here, Glenda DeBrecht, a horticulturist, invited me to don latex
gloves and help her transplant pinky-size plantlets from their petri dish
to small pots. The whole operation is performed thousands of times, largely
because there is so much uncertainty about the outcome. There's no way
of telling where in the genome the new DNA will land, and if it winds up
in the wrong place, the new gene won't be expressed (or it will be poorly
expressed) or the plant may be a freak. I was struck by how the technology
could at once be astoundingly sophisticated and yet also a shot in the
genetic dark.
''There's still a lot we don't understand
about gene expression,'' Stark acknowledged. A great many factors influence
whether, or to what extent, a new gene will do what it's supposed to, including
the environment. In one early German experiment, scientists succeeded in
splicing the gene for redness into petunias. All went as planned until
the weather turned hot and an entire field of red petunias suddenly and
inexplicably lost their pigment. The process didn't seem nearly as simple
as Monsanto's cherished software metaphor would suggest.
When I got home from St. Louis, I phoned
Richard Lewontin, the Harvard geneticist, to ask him what he thought of
the software metaphor. ''From an intellectual-property standpoint, it's
exactly right,'' he said. ''But it's a bad one in terms of biology. It
implies you feed a program into a machine and get predictable results.
But the genome is very noisy. If my computer made as many mistakes as an
organism does'' -- in interpreting its DNA, he meant -- ''I'd throw it
out.''
I asked him for a better metaphor. ''An
ecosystem,'' he offered. ''You can always intervene and change something
in it, but there's no way of knowing what all the downstream effects will
be or how it might affect the environment. We have such a miserably poor
understanding of how the organism develops from its DNA that I would be
surprised if we don't get one rude shock after another.''
Flowering
My own crop was thriving when I got home
from St. Louis; the New Leafs were as big as bushes, crowned with slender
flower stalks. Potato flowers are actually quite pretty, at least by vegetable
standards -- five-petaled pink stars with yellow centers that give off
a faint rose perfume. One sultry afternoon I watched the bumblebees making
their lazy rounds of my potato blossoms, thoughtlessly powdering their
thighs with yellow pollen grains before lumbering off to appointments with
other blossoms, others species.
Uncertainty is the theme that unifies
much of the criticism leveled against biotech agriculture by scientists
and environmentalists. By planting millions of acres of genetically altered
plants, we have introduced something novel into the environment and the
food chain, the consequences of which are not -- and at this point, cannot
be -- completely understood. One of the uncertainties has to do with those
grains of pollen bumblebees are carting off from my potatoes. That pollen
contains Bt genes that may wind up in some other, related plant, possibly
conferring a new evolutionary advantage on that species. ''Gene flow,''
the scientific term for this phenomenon, occurs only between closely related
species, and since the potato evolved in South America, the chances are
slim that my Bt potato genes will escape into the wilds of Connecticut.
(It's interesting to note that while biotechnology depends for its power
on the ability to move genes freely among species and even phyla, its environmental
safety depends on the very opposite phenomenon: on the integrity of species
in nature and their rejection of foreign genetic material.)
Yet what happens if and when Peruvian
farmers plant Bt potatoes? Or when I plant a biotech crop that does have
local relatives? A study reported in Nature last month found that plant
traits introduced by genetic engineering were more likely
to escape into the wild than the same traits introduced conventionally.
Andrew Kimbrell, director of the Center
for Technology Assessment in Washington, told me he believes such escapes
are inevitable. ''Biological pollution will be the environmental nightmare
of the 21st century,'' he said when I reached him by phone. ''This is not
like chemical pollution -- an oil spill -- that eventually disperses. Biological
pollution is an entirely different model, more like a disease. Is Monsanto
going to be held legally responsible when one of its transgenes creates
a superweed or resistant insect?''
Kimbrell maintains that because our pollution
laws were written before the advent of biotechnology, the new industry
is being regulated under an ill-fitting regime designed for the chemical
age. Congress has so far passed no environmental law dealing specifically
with biotech. Monsanto, for its part, claims that it has thoroughly examined
all the potential environmental and health risks of its biotech plants,
and points out that three regulatory agencies -- the U.S.D.A., the E.P.A.
and the F.D.A. -- have signed off on its products. Speaking of the New
Leaf, Dave Stark told me, ''This is the most intensively studied potato
in history.''
Significant uncertainties remain, however.
Take the case of insect resistance to Bt, a potential form of ''biological
pollution'' that could end the effectiveness of one of the safest insecticides
we have -- and cripple the organic farmers who depend on it. The theory,
which is now accepted by most entomologists, is that Bt crops will add
so much of the toxin to the environment that insects will develop resistance
to it. Until now, resistance hasn't been a worry because the Bt sprays
break down quickly in sunlight and organic farmers use them only sparingly.
Resistance is essentially a form of co-evolution that seems to occur only
when a given pest population is threatened with extinction; under that
pressure, natural selection favors whatever chance mutations will allow
the species to change and survive.
Working with the E.P.A., Monsanto has
developed a ''resistance-management plan'' to postpone that eventuality.
Under the plan, farmers who plant Bt crops must leave a certain portion
of their land in non-Bt crops to create ''refuges'' for the targeted insects.
The goal is to prevent the first Bt-resistant Colorado potato beetle from
mating with a second resistant bug, unleashing a new race of superbeetles.
The theory is that when a Bt-resistant bug does show up, it can be induced
to mate with a susceptible bug from the refuge, thus diluting the new gene
for resistance.
But a lot has to go right for Mr. Wrong
to meet Miss Right. No one is sure how big the refuges need to be, where
they should be situated or whether the farmers will cooperate (creating
havens for a detested pest is counter-intuitive, after all), not to mention
the bugs. In the case of potatoes, the E.P.A. has made the plan voluntary
and lets the companies themselves implement it; there are no E.P.A. enforcement
mechanisms. Which is why most of the organic farmers I spoke to dismissed
the regulatory scheme as window dressing.
Monsanto executives offer two basic responses
to criticism of their Bt crops. The first is that their voluntary resistance-management
plans will work, though the company's definition of success will come as
small consolation to an organic farmer: Monsanto scientists told me that
if all goes well, resistance can be postponed for 30 years. (Some scientists
believe it will come in three to five years.) The second response is more
troubling. In St. Louis, I met with Jerry Hjelle, Monsanto's vice president
for regulatory affairs. Hjelle told me that resistance should not unduly
concern us since ''there are a thousand other Bt's out there'' -- other
insecticidal proteins. ''We can handle this problem with new products,''
he said. ''The critics don't know what we have in the pipeline.''
And then Hjelle uttered two words that
I thought had been expunged from the corporate vocabulary a long time ago:
''Trust us.''
'Trust'' is a key to the success of biotechnology
in the marketplace, and while I was in St. Louis, I asked Hjelle and several
of his colleagues why they thought the Europeans were resisting biotech
food. Austria, Luxembourg and Norway, risking trade war with the United
States, have refused to accept imports of genetically altered crops. Activists
in England have been staging sit-ins and ''decontaminations'' in biotech
test fields. A group of French farmers broke into a warehouse and ruined
a shipment of biotech corn seed by urinating on it. The Prince of Wales,
who is an ardent organic gardener, waded into the biotech debate last June,
vowing in a column in The Daily Telegraph that he would never eat, or serve
to his guests, the fruits of a technology that ''takes mankind into realms
that belong to God and to God alone.''
Monsanto executives are quick to point
out that mad cow disease has made Europeans extremely sensitive about the
safety of their food chain and has undermined confidence in their regulators.
''They don't have a trusted agency like the F.D.A. looking after the safety
of their food supply,'' said Phil Angell, Monsanto's director of corporate
communications. Over the summer, Angell was dispatched repeatedly to Europe
to put out the P.R. fires; some at Monsanto worry these could spread to
the United States.
I checked with the F.D.A. to find out
exactly what had been done to insure the safety of this potato. I was mystified
by the fact that the Bt toxin was not being treated as a ''food additive''
subject to labeling, even though the new protein is expressed in the potato
itself. The label on a bag of biotech potatoes in the supermarket will
tell a consumer all about the nutrients they contain, even the trace amounts
of copper. Yet it is silent not only about the fact that those potatoes
are the product of genetic engineering but also about their containing
an insecticide.
At the F.D.A., I was referred to James
Maryanski, who oversees biotech food at the agency. I began by asking him
why the F.D.A. didn't consider Bt a food additive. Under F.D.A. law, any
novel substance added to a food must -- unless it is ''generally regarded
as safe'' (''GRAS,'' in F.D.A. parlance) -- be thoroughly tested and if
it changes the product in any way, must be labeled.
''That's easy,'' Maryanski said. ''Bt
is a pesticide, so it's exempt'' from F.D.A. regulation. That is, even
though a Bt potato is plainly a food, for the purposes of Federal regulation
it is not a food but a pesticide and therefore falls under the jurisdiction
of the E.P.A.
Yet even in the case of those biotech
crops over which the F.D.A. does have jurisdiction, I learned that F.D.A.
regulation of biotech food has been largely voluntary since 1992, when
Vice President Dan Quayle issued regulatory guidelines for the industry
as part of the Bush Administration's campaign for ''regulatory relief.''
Under the guidelines, new proteins engineered into foods are regarded as
additives (unless they're pesticides), but as Maryanski explained, ''the
determination whether a new protein is GRAS can be made by the company.''
Companies with a new biotech food decide for themselves whether they need
to consult with the F.D.A. by following a series of ''decision trees''
that pose yes or no questions like this one: ''Does. . .the introduced
protein raise any safety concern?''
Since my Bt potatoes were being regulated
as a pesticide by the E.P.A. rather than as a food by the F.D.A., I wondered
if the safety standards are the same. ''Not exactly,'' Maryanski explained.
The F.D.A. requires ''a reasonable certainty of no harm'' in a food additive,
a standard most pesticides could not meet. After all, ''pesticides are
toxic to something,'' Maryanski pointed out, so the E.P.A. instead establishes
human ''tolerances'' for each chemical and then subjects it to a risk-benefit
analysis.
When I called the E.P.A. and asked if
the agency had tested my Bt potatoes for safety as a human food, the answer
was. . .not exactly. It seems the E.P.A. works from the assumption that
if the original potato is safe and the Bt protein added to it is safe,
then the whole New Leaf package is presumed to be safe. Some geneticists
believe this reasoning is flawed, contending that the process of genetic
engineering itself may cause subtle, as yet unrecognized changes
in a food.
The original Superior potato is safe,
obviously enough, so that left the Bt toxin, which was fed to mice, and
they ''did fine, had no side effects,'' I was told. I always feel better
knowing that my food has been poison-tested by mice, though in this case
there was a small catch: the mice weren't actually eating the potatoes,
not even an extract from the potatoes, but rather straight Bt produced
in a bacterial culture.
So are my New Leafs safe to eat? Probably,
assuming that a New Leaf is nothing more than the sum of a safe potato
and a safe pesticide, and further assuming that the E.P.A.'s idea of a
safe pesticide is tantamount to a safe food. Yet I still had a question.
Let us assume that my potatoes are a pesticide -- a very safe pesticide.
Every pesticide in my garden shed -- including the Bt sprays -- carries
a lengthy warning label. The label on my bottle of Bt says, among other
things, that I should avoid inhaling the spray or getting it in an open
wound. So if my New Leaf potatoes contain an E.P.A.-registered pesticide,
why don't they carry some such label?
Maryanski had the answer. At least for
the purposes of labeling, my New Leafs have morphed yet again, back into
a food: the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act gives the F.D.A. sole jurisdiction
over the labeling of plant foods, and the F.D.A. has ruled that biotech
foods need be labeled only if they contain known allergens or have otherwise
been ''materially'' changed.
But isn't turning a potato into a pesticide
a material change?
It doesn't matter. The Food, Drug and
Cosmetic Act specifically bars the F.D.A. from including any information
about pesticides on its food labels.
I thought about Maryanski's candid and
wondrous explanations the next time I met Phil Angell, who again cited
the critical role of the F.D.A. in assuring Americans that biotech food
is safe. But this time he went even further. ''Monsanto should not have
to vouchsafe the safety of biotech food,'' he said. ''Our interest is in
selling as much of it as possible. Assuring its safety is the F.D.A.'s
job.''
Meeting the Beetles
My Colorado potato beetle vigil came to
an end the first week of July, shortly before I went to Idaho to visit
potato growers. I spied a single mature beetle sitting on a New Leaf leaf;
when I reached to pick it up, the beetle fell drunkenly to the ground.
It had been sickened by the plant and would soon be dead. My New Leafs
were working.
From where a typical American potato grower
stands, the New Leaf looks very much like a godsend. That's because where
the typical potato grower stands is in the middle of a bright green field
that has been doused with so much pesticide that the leaves of his plants
wear a dull white chemical bloom that troubles him as much as it does the
rest of us. Out there, at least, the calculation is not complex: a product
that promises to eliminate the need for even a single spraying of pesticide
is, very simply, an economic and environmental boon.
No one can make a better case for a biotech
crop than a potato farmer, which is why Monsanto was eager to introduce
me to several large growers. Like many farmers today, the ones I met feel
trapped by the chemical inputs required to extract the high yields they
must achieve in order to pay for the chemical inputs they need. The economics
are daunting: a potato farmer in south-central Idaho will spend roughly
$1,965 an acre (mainly on chemicals, electricity, water and seed) to grow
a crop that, in a good year, will earn him maybe $1,980. That's how much
a french-fry processor will pay for the 20 tons of potatoes a single Idaho
acre can yield. (The real money in agriculture -- 90 percent of the value
added to the food we eat -- is in selling inputs to farmers and then processing
their crops.)
Danny Forsyth laid out the dismal economics
of potato farming for me one sweltering morning at the coffee shop in downtown
Jerome, Idaho. Forsyth, 60, is a slight blue-eyed man with a small gray
ponytail; he farms 3,000 acres of potatoes, corn and wheat, and he spoke
about agricultural chemicals like a man desperate to kick a bad habit.
''None of us would use them if we had any choice,'' he said glumly.
I asked him to walk me through a season's
regimen. It typically begins early in the spring with a soil fumigant;
to control nematodes, many potato farmers douse their fields with a chemical
toxic enough to kill every trace of microbial life in the soil. Then, at
planting, a systemic insecticide (like Thimet) is applied to the soil;
this will be absorbed by the young seedlings and, for several weeks, will
kill any insect that eats their leaves. After planting, Forsyth puts down
an herbicide -- Sencor or Eptam -- to ''clean'' his field of all weeds.
When the potato seedlings are six inches tall, an herbicide may be sprayed
a second time to control weeds.
Idaho farmers like Forsyth farm in vast
circles defined by the rotation of a pivot irrigation system, typically
135 acres to a circle; I'd seen them from 30,000 feet flying in, a grid
of verdant green coins pressed into a desert of scrubby brown. Pesticides
and fertilizers are simply added to the irrigation system, which on Forsyth's
farm draws most of its water from the nearby Snake River. Along with their
water, Forsyth's potatoes may receive 10 applications of chemical fertilizer
during the growing season. Just before the rows close -- when the leaves
of one row of plants meet those of the next -- he begins spraying Bravo,
a fungicide, to control late blight, one of the biggest threats to the
potato crop. (Late blight, which caused the Irish potato famine, is an
airborne fungus that turns stored potatoes into rotting mush.) Blight is
such a serious problem that the E.P.A. currently allows farmers to spray
powerful fungicides that haven't passed the usual approval process. Forsyth's
potatoes will receive eight applications of fungicide.
Twice each summer, Forsyth hires a crop
duster to spray for aphids. Aphids are harmless in themselves, but they
transmit the leafroll virus, which in Russet Burbank potatoes causes net
necrosis, a brown spotting that will cause a processor to reject a whole
crop. It happened to Forsyth last year. ''I lost 80,000 bags'' -- they're
a hundred pounds each -- ''to net necrosis,'' he said. ''Instead of getting
$4.95 a bag, I had to take $2 a bag from the dehydrator, and I was lucky
to get that.'' Net necrosis is a purely cosmetic defect; yet because big
buyers like McDonald's believe (with good reason) that we don't like to
see brown spots in our fries, farmers like Danny Forsyth must spray their
fields with some of the most toxic chemicals in use, including an organophosphate
called Monitor.
''Monitor is a deadly chemical,'' Forsyth
said. ''I won't go into a field for four or five days after it's been sprayed
-- even to fix a broken pivot.'' That is, he would sooner lose a whole
circle to drought than expose himself or an employee to Monitor, which
has been found to cause neurological damage.
It's not hard to see why a farmer like
Forsyth, struggling against tight margins and heartsick over chemicals,
would leap at a New Leaf -- or, in his case, a New Leaf Plus, which is
protected from leafroll virus as well as beetles. ''The New Leaf means
I can skip a couple of sprayings, including the Monitor,'' he said. ''I
save money, and I sleep better. It also happens to be a nice-looking spud.''
The New Leafs don't come cheaply, however. They cost between $20 and $30
extra per acre in ''technology fees'' to Monsanto.
Forsyth and I discussed organic agriculture,
about which he had the usual things to say (''That's all fine on a small
scale, but they don't have to feed the world''), as well as a few things
I'd never heard from a conventional farmer: ''I like to eat organic food,
and in fact I raise a lot of it at the house. The vegetables we buy at
the market we just wash and wash and wash. I'm not sure I should be saying
this, but I always plant a small area of potatoes without any chemicals.
By the end of the season, my field potatoes are fine to eat, but any potatoes
I pulled today are probably still full of systemics. I don't eat them.''
Forsyth's words came back to me a few
hours later, during lunch at the home of another potato farmer. Steve Young
is a progressive and prosperous potato farmer -- he calls himself an agribusinessman.
In addition to his 10,000 acres -- the picture window in his family room
gazes out on 85 circles, all computer-controlled -- Young owns a share
in a successful fertilizer distributorship. His wife prepared a lavish
feast for us, and after Dave, their 18-year-old, said grace, adding a special
prayer for me (the Youngs are devout Mormons), she passed around a big
bowl of homemade potato salad. As I helped myself, my Monsanto escort asked
what was in the salad, flashing me a smile that suggested she might already
know. ''It's a combination of New Leafs and some of our regular Russets,''
our hostess said proudly. ''Dug this very morning.''
After talking to farmers like Steve Young
and Danny Forsyth, and walking fields made virtually sterile by a drenching
season-long rain of chemicals, you could understand how Monsanto's New
Leaf potato does indeed look like an environmental boon. Set against current
practices, growing New Leafs represents a more sustainable way of potato
farming. This advance must be weighed, of course, against everything we
don't yet know about New Leafs -- and a few things we do: like the problem
of Bt resistance I had heard so much about back East. While I was in Idaho
and Washington State, I asked potato farmers to show me their refuges.
This proved to be a joke.
''I guess that's a refuge over there,''
one Washington farmer told me, pointing to a cornfield.
Monsanto's grower contract never mentions
the word ''refuge'' and only requires that farmers plant no more than 80
percent of their fields in New Leaf. Basically, any field not planted in
New Leaf is considered a refuge, even if that field has been sprayed to
kill every bug in it. Farmers call such acreage a clean field; calling
it a refuge is a stretch at best.
It probably shouldn't come as a big surprise
that conventional farmers would have trouble embracing the notion of an
insect refuge. To insist on real and substantial refuges is to ask them
to start thinking of their fields in an entirely new way, less as a factory
than as an ecosystem. In the factory, Bt is another in a long line of ''silver
bullets'' that work for a while and then get replaced; in the ecosystem,
all bugs are not necessarily bad, and the relationships between various
species can be manipulated to achieve desired ends -- like the long-term
sustainability of Bt.
This is, of course, precisely the approach
organic farmers have always taken to their fields, and after my lunch with
the Youngs that afternoon, I paid a brief visit to an organic potato grower.
Mike Heath is a rugged, laconic man in his mid-50's; like most of the organic
farmers I've met, he looks as though he spends a lot more time out of doors
than a conventional farmer, and he probably does: chemicals are, among
other things, labor-saving devices. While we drove around his 500 acres
in a battered old pickup, I asked him about biotechnology. He voiced many
reservations -- it was synthetic, there were too many unknowns -- but his
main objection to planting a biotech potato was simply that ''it's not
what my customers want.''
That point was driven home last December
when the Department of Agriculture proposed a new ''organic standards''
rule that, among other things, would have allowed biotech crops to carry
an organic label. After receiving a flood of outraged cards and letters,
the agency backed off. (As did Monsanto, which asked the U.S.D.A. to shelve
the issue for three years.) Heath suggested that biotech may actually help
organic farmers by driving worried consumers to the organic label.
I asked Heath about the New Leaf. He had
no doubt resistance would come -- ''the bugs are always going to be smarter
than we are'' -- and said it was unjust that Monsanto was profiting from
the ruin of Bt, something he regarded as a ''public good.''
None of this particularly surprised me;
what did was that Heath himself resorted to Bt sprays only once or twice
in the last 10 years. I had assumed that organic farmers used Bt or other
approved pesticides in much the same way conventional farmers use theirs,
but as Heath showed me around his farm, I began to understand that organic
farming was a lot more complicated than substituting good inputs for bad.
Instead of buying many inputs at all, Heath relied on long and complex
crop rotations to prevent a buildup of crop-specific pests -- he has found,
for example, that planting wheat after spuds ''confuses'' the potato beetles.
He also plants strips of flowering crops
on the margins of his potato fields -- peas or alfalfa, usually -- to attract
the beneficial insects that eat beetle larvae and aphids. If there aren't
enough beneficials to do the job, he'll introduce ladybugs. Heath also
grows eight varieties of potatoes, on the theory that biodiversity in a
field, as in the wild, is the best defense against any imbalances in the
system. A bad year with one variety will probably be offset by a good year
with the others.
''I can eat any potato in this field right
now,'' he said, digging Yukon Golds for me to take home. ''Most farmers
can't eat their spuds out of the field. But you don't want to start talking
about safe food in Idaho.''
Heath's were the antithesis of ''clean''
fields, and, frankly, their weedy margins and overall patchiness made them
much less pretty to look at. Yet it was the very complexity of these fields
-- the sheer diversity of species, both in space and time -- that made
them productive year after year without many inputs. The system provided
for most of its needs.
All told, Heath's annual inputs consisted
of natural fertilizers (compost and fish powder), ladybugs and a copper
spray (for blight) -- a few hundred dollars an acre. Of course, before
you can compare Heath's operation with a conventional farm, you've got
to add in the extra labor (lots of smaller crops means more work; organic
fields must also be cultivated for weeds) and time -- the typical organic
rotation calls for potatoes every fifth year, in contrast to every third
on a conventional farm. I asked Heath about his yields. To my astonishment,
he was digging between 300 and 400 bags per acre -- just as many as Danny
Forsyth and only slightly fewer than Steve Young. Heath was also getting
almost twice the price for his spuds: $8 a bag from an organic processor
who was shipping frozen french fries to Japan.
On the drive back to Boise, I thought
about why Heath's farm remained the exception, both in Idaho and elsewhere.
Here was a genuinely new paradigm that seemed to work. But while it's true
that organic agriculture is gaining ground (I met a big grower in Washington
who had just added several organic circles), few of the mainstream farmers
I met considered organic a ''realistic'' alternative. For one thing, it's
expensive to convert: organic certifiers require a field to go without
chemicals for three years before it can be called organic. For another,
the U.S.D.A., which sets the course of American agriculture, has long been
hostile to organic methods.
But I suspect the real reasons run deeper,
and have more to do with the fact that in a dozen ways a farm like Heath's
simply doesn't conform to the requirements of a corporate food chain. Heath's
type of agriculture doesn't leave much room for the Monsantos of this world:
organic farmers buy remarkably little -- some seed, a few tons of compost,
maybe a few gallons of ladybugs. That's because the organic farmer's focus
is on a process, rather than on products. Nor is that process readily systematized,
reduced to, say, a prescribed regime of sprayings like the one Forsyth
outlined for me -- regimes that are often designed by companies selling
chemicals.
Most of the intelligence and local knowledge
needed to run Mike Heath's farm resides in the head of Mike Heath. Growing
potatoes conventionally requires intelligence, too, but a large portion
of it resides in laboratories in distant places like St. Louis, where it
is employed in developing sophisticated chemical inputs. That sort of centralization
of agriculture is unlikely to be reversed, if only because there's so much
money in it; besides, it's much easier for the farmer to buy prepackaged
solutions from big companies. ''Whose Head Is the Farmer Using? Whose Head
Is Using the Farmer?'' goes the title of a Wendell Berry essay.
Organic farmers like Heath have also rejected
what is perhaps the cornerstone of industrial agriculture: the economies
of scale that only a monoculture can achieve. Monoculture -- growing vast
fields of the same crop year after year -- is probably the single most
powerful simplification of modern agriculture. But monoculture is poorly
fitted to the way nature seems to work. Very simply, a field of identical
plants will be exquisitely vulnerable to insects, weeds and disease. Monoculture
is at the root of virtually every problem that bedevils the modern farmer,
and that virtually every input has been designed to solve.
To put the matter baldly, a farmer like
Heath is working very hard to adjust his fields and his crops to the nature
of nature, while farmers like Forsyth are working equally hard to adjust
nature in their fields to the requirement of monoculture and, beyond that,
to the needs of the industrial food chain. I remember asking Heath what
he did about net necrosis, the bane of Forsyth's existence. ''That's only
really a problem with Russet Burbanks,'' he said. ''So I plant other kinds.''
Forsyth can't do that. He's part of a food chain -- at the far end of which
stands a long, perfectly golden McDonald's fry -- that demands he grow
Russet Burbanks and little else.
This is where biotechnology comes in,
to the rescue of Forsyth's Russet Burbanks and, if Monsanto is right, to
the whole food chain of which they form a part. Monoculture is in trouble
-- the pesticides that make it possible are rapidly being lost, either
to resistance or to heightened concerns about their danger. Biotechnology
is the new silver bullet that will save monoculture. But a new silver bullet
is not a new paradigm -- rather, it's something that will allow the old
paradigm to survive. That paradigm will always construe the problem in
Forsyth's fields as a Colorado potato beetle problem, rather than as a
problem of potato monoculture.
Like the silver bullets that preceded
them -- the modern hybrids, the pesticides and the chemical fertilizers
-- the new biotech crops will probably, as advertised, increase yields.
But equally important, they will also speed the process by which agriculture
is being concentrated in a shrinking number of corporate hands. If that
process has advanced more slowly in farming than in other sectors of the
economy, it is only because nature herself -- her complexity, diversity
and sheer intractability in the face of our best efforts at control --
has acted as a check on it. But biotechnology promises to remedy this ''problem,''
too.
Consider, for example, the seed, perhaps
the ultimate ''means of production'' in any agriculture. It is only in
the last few decades that farmers have begun buying their seed from big
companies, and even today many farmers still save some seed every fall
to replant in the spring. Brown-bagging, as it is called, allows farmers
to select strains particularly well adapted to their needs; since these
seeds are often traded, the practice advances the state of the genetic
art -- indeed, has given us most of our crop plants. Seeds by their very
nature don't lend themselves to commodification: they produce more of themselves
ad infinitum (with the exception of certain modern hybrids), and for that
reason the genetics of most major crop plants have traditionally been regarded
as a common heritage. In the case of the potato, the genetics of most important
varieties -- the Burbanks, the Superiors, the Atlantics -- have always
been in the public domain. Before Monsanto released the New Leaf, there
had never been a multinational seed corporation in the potato-seed business
-- there was no money in it.
Biotechnology changes all that. By adding
a new gene or two to a Russet Burbank or Superior, Monsanto can now patent
the improved variety. Legally, it has been possible to patent a plant for
many years, but biologically, these patents have been almost impossible
to enforce. Biotechnology partly solves that problem. A Monsanto agent
can perform a simple test in my garden and prove that my plants are the
company's intellectual property. The contract farmers sign with Monsanto
allows company representatives to perform such tests in their fields at
will. According to Progressive Farmer, a trade journal, Monsanto is using
informants and hiring Pinkertons to enforce its patent rights; it has already
brought legal action against hundreds of farmers for patent infringement.
Soon the company may not have to go to
the trouble. It is expected to acquire the patent to a powerful new biotechnology
called the Terminator, which will, in effect, allow the company to enforce
its patents biologically. Developed by the U.S.D.A. in partnership with
Delta and Pine Land, a seed company in the process of being purchased by
Monsanto, the Terminator is a complex of genes that, theoretically, can
be spliced into any crop plant, where it will cause every seed produced
by that plant to be sterile. Once the Terminator becomes the industry standard,
control over the genetics of crop plants will complete its move from the
farmer's field to the seed company -- to which the farmer will have no
choice but to return year after year. The Terminator will allow companies
like Monsanto to privatize one of the last great commons in nature -- the
genetics of the crop plants that civilization has developed over the past
10,000 years.
At lunch on his farm in Idaho, I had asked
Steve Young what he thought about all this, especially about the contract
Monsanto made him sign. I wondered how the American farmer, the putative
heir to a long tradition of agrarian independence, was adjusting to the
idea of field men snooping around his farm, and patented seed he couldn't
replant. Young said he had made his peace with corporate agriculture, and
with biotechnology in particular: ''It's here to stay. It's necessary if
we're going to feed the world, and it's going to take us forward.''
Then I asked him if he saw any downside
to biotechnology, and he paused for what seemed a very long time. What
he then said silenced the table. ''There is a cost,'' he said. ''It gives
corporate America one more noose around my neck.''
Harvest
A few weeks after I returned home from
Idaho, I dug my New Leafs, harvesting a gorgeous-looking pile of white
spuds, including some real lunkers. The plants had performed brilliantly,
though so had all my other potatoes. The beetle problem never got serious,
probably because the diversity of species in my (otherwise organic) garden
had attracted enough beneficial insects to keep the beetles in check. By
the time I harvested my crop, the question of eating the New Leafs was
moot. Whatever I thought about the soundness of the process that had declared
these potatoes safe didn't matter. Not just because I'd already had a few
bites of New Leaf potato salad at the Youngs but also because Monsanto
and the F.D.A. and the E.P.A. had long ago taken the decision of whether
or not to eat a biotech potato out of my -- out of all of our -- hands.
Chances are, I've eaten New Leafs already, at McDonald's or in a bag of
Frito-Lay chips, though without a label there can be no way of knowing
for sure.
So if I've probably eaten New Leafs already,
why was it that I kept putting off eating mine? Maybe because it was August,
and there were so many more-interesting fresh potatoes around -- fingerlings
with dense, luscious flesh, Yukon Golds that tasted as though they had
been pre-buttered -- that the idea of cooking with a bland commercial variety
like the Superior seemed beside the point.
There was this, too: I had called Margaret
Mellon at the Union of Concerned Scientists to ask her advice. Mellon is
a molecular biologist and lawyer and a leading critic of biotech agriculture.
She couldn't offer any hard scientific evidence that my New Leafs were
unsafe, though she emphasized how little we know about the effects of Bt
in the human diet. ''That research simply hasn't been done,'' she said.
I pressed. Is there any reason I shouldn't
eat these spuds?
''Let me turn that around. Why would you
want to?''
It was a good question. So for a while
I kept my New Leafs in a bag on the porch. Then I took the bag with me
on vacation, thinking maybe I'd sample them there, but the bag came home
untouched.
The bag sat on my porch till the other
day, when I was invited to an end-of-summer potluck supper at the town
beach. Perfect. I signed up to make a potato salad. I brought the bag into
the kitchen and set a pot of water on the stove. But before it boiled I
was stricken by this thought: I'd have to tell people at the picnic what
they were eating. I'm sure (well, almost sure) the potatoes are safe, but
if the idea of eating biotech food without knowing it bothered me, how
could I possibly ask my neighbors to? So I'd tell them about the New Leafs
-- and then, no doubt, lug home a big bowl of untouched potato salad. For
surely there would be other potato salads at the potluck and who, given
the choice, was ever going to opt for the bowl with the biotech spuds?
So there they sit, a bag of biotech spuds
on my porch. I'm sure they're absolutely fine. I pass the bag every day,
thinking I really should try one, but I'm beginning to think that what
I like best about these particular biotech potatoes -- what makes them
different -- is that I have this choice. And until I know more, I choose
not.