Biotechnology
'No Sure Fix' for World's Nitrogen Problem
Summary
posted by Meridian on 12/17/2009
Source: UCS
Author: n/a
Genetic modification has yet to produce any commercial crops that
reduce nitrogen fertilizer pollution, but traditional breeding and
other methods have already done so, says a new report from the Union
of Concerned Scientists (UCS), a non-profit group in the U.S. Non-GM
methods have improved the nitrogen use efficiency of wheat, rice, and
corn by about 20 percent to 40 percent, according to the report, which
is entitled "No Sure Fix: Prospects for Reducing Nitrogen
Fertilizer Pollution through Genetic Engineering." The
biotechnology industry has identified genes that have the potential to
reduce nitrogen pollution and have tested them in laboratories and
field trials, but none have been made commercially available. The UCS
report argues that the prospects for their commercial use are
uncertain due to the complexity of nitrogen metabolism and genetics in
crops. Margaret Mellon, director of UCS's food and environment
program, argues that although "we need to pursue all reasonable
approaches to solve the nitrogen overload problem . . . We should
focus first on making the necessary public investment in traditional
crop breeding, cover crops, precision farming, and other proven
approaches to boost nitrogen efficiency." "Nitrogen
pollution is among the world's worst environmental problems,"
says Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist in UCS's food and
environment program and author of the report. The problem, which
occurs when crop plants absorb only some of the nitrogen fertilizer
that is applied, should get worse as global demand for food increases,
Mellon says. The press release can be viewed online at the link
below.
The
original article may still be available at
greenbio.checkbiotech.org/news/biotechnology_no_sure_fix_worlds_nitroge...
Biotechnology
'No Sure Fix' for World's Nitrogen Fertilizer Pollution Problem, New
Report Finds
Friday,
December 11, 2009
WASHINGTON
- After more than a decade of effort, the biotechnology industry has
yet to produce any commercial crops engineered to reduce nitrogen
fertilizer pollution, while traditional breeding and other methods
have improved the nitrogen use efficiency of wheat, rice, and corn by
about 20 percent to 40 percent, according to a report released today
by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).
"Nitrogen pollution is among the world's worst environmental
problems," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist in UCS's
Food and Environment program and author of the report. "A number
of very promising solutions have begun addressing the problem, but so
far genetic engineering has yet to make a contribution."
Plants, including commodity farm crops, need large amounts of nitrogen
to thrive and grow. Soils often do not contain enough nitrogen for
plants to attain optimal productivity, but many farmers apply far more
synthetic nitrogen fertilizer to their soils than what the plants can
use. More than half of the nitrogen fertilizer applied on U.S. farms,
for instance, is not absorbed by crops, and much of it becomes a
pollutant.
Nitrogen pollution causes harm in multiple ways. Chemical fertilizers
from farms, for example, are the largest contributor to the Gulf of
Mexico's "dead zone"-an area the size of Connecticut and
Delaware combined where excess nutrients indirectly rob the region of
oxygen, making it uninhabitable for commercially valuable fish and
other marine life for much of the year. In addition, nitrogen in the
form of nitrate can seep into drinking water and become a health risk,
especially to pregnant women and children. Nitrogen entering the air
as ammonia, meanwhile, contributes to smog, respiratory diseases and
acid rain, which damages forests and other habitats.
Nitrogen overuse in agriculture also is the largest domestic,
human-caused source of nitrous oxide, a global warming gas that is
nearly 300 times more potent than carbon dioxide. According to the
Environmental Protection Agency, agricultural soil management accounts
for two-thirds of the nation's human-induced nitrous oxide
emissions.
One solution to the nitrogen overload problem is to develop crops that
use nitrogen more efficiently, which would reduce the amount of
nitrogen fertilizer farmers apply to their fields. Traditional
breeding methods have already proven successful at doing this.
Meanwhile, the biotechnology industry has identified genes that have
the potential to reduce nitrogen pollution and have tested them in
laboratories and field trials, but none are commercially available.
The UCS report, "No Sure Fix: Prospects for Reducing Nitrogen
Fertilizer Pollution through Genetic Engineering," evaluated the
new genes and concluded that the prospects for their commercial use
are uncertain due to the complexity of nitrogen metabolism and
genetics in crops.
The report documents a number of practices that can complement
nitrogen-efficient crops in reducing nitrogen fertilizer pollution.
Precision farming, for instance, times fertilizer applications to
match crop growth, which reduces the amount of nitrogen applied to
fields. Farmers also can grow cover crops-plants grown between cash
crop growing seasons-to protect the soil, add organic nitrogen and
other nutrients, and remove excess nitrogen. Even if genetically
engineered crops were commercially viable, they would not be able to
reduce the large amount of nitrogen pollution that occurs when farmers
are not growing cash crops.
"We need to pursue all reasonable approaches to solve the
nitrogen overload problem," said Margaret Mellon, director of
UCS's Food and Environment Program. "We should focus first on
making the necessary public investment in traditional crop breeding,
cover crops, precision farming, and other proven approaches to boost
nitrogen efficiency. Our nitrogen pollution problem will only worsen
as global food demand increases, which makes it all the more critical
that we invest in technologies and methods we know work."
Copyright ©2009 Union of Concerned Scientists