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Status of Global Advancement

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Top Five Countries = 96% of market. 20 % increase in biotech acreage from 2003 ... bST (bovine somatotropin) NDSU. Extension. Next Generation of Ag Biotech Products ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Status of Global Advancement


1
Status of Global Advancement of Biotechnology
in All Areas
Duane R. Berglund and Phil McClean Department of
Plant Science North Dakota State University
September 22, 2005
2
The Crop Biotech Market Is Dominated By Five
Countriesa
6.7/13 ma (6.0/10 ma)
58.8/118 ma (63/106 ma)
4.6/9 ma (3/7 ma)
6.2/12 ma (3/7 ma)
20.0/40 ma (21/36 ma)
Top Five Countries 96 of market 20 increase
in biotech acreage from 2003
a2004 growing season data. http//www.isaaa.org/Pr
ess_release/Briefs30-2003/press/b30_english.htm
2003 in parentheses.
3
Impact of GM Crops on Worldwide Crop Production
GM crops are grown on 5 of the 3.7 billion acres
of cultivated land in the world
4
Global Value of Biotech Crop Market
  • 2004 market value of Biotech crops was 4.70
    Billion
  • Represented 15 of the total global crop value of
    32.5 Billion
  • Projected global Biotech crop value in 2005 is a
    gt 5 Billion
  • Source CropBiotech.Net

5
The Latest Biotech News
ND GMO Planting Decisions (Winter 2005)
  • New law enacted during 2005 legislative session
  • Only the ND state government has the authority
    to ban
  • plantings of GMO crops
  • Response to laws passed at county level in other
    states

EU Approving GMO-free Zones (May 2005)
  • European Union GMO regulations permit regions
  • to declare themselves GMO Free
  • Otherwise approved GMO products can be grown
  • 162 regions or provinces (like states in USA)
    have asked to be GMO free
  • 4500 total government units have made the request

6
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7
Economic Effect of Bt Cotton In China
  • 200/acre increase in income
  • 750 million increase nationally

8
Benefits to Hungarian Farmers
Trait Total benefit Farmer realized Industry realized
Bt corn (european cornborer) 3 mill 76 24
Bt corn (Western corn rootworm) 16 mill 65 35
Herbicide tolerant maize 14 mill 73 27
Herbicide tolerant sugarbeet 3 mill 50 50
From Demont et al. 2005. Potential impact of
biotechnology in eastern Europe transgenic
maize, sugar beet, and oilseed rape in Hungary.
9
Herbicide resistant crops
  • current soybean, corn, canola, cotton, alfalfa
  • coming sugarbeet (on hold), lettuce,
    strawberry,
  • wheat (on hold), Turf grass
  • resistance gene from bacteria is source

Source Monsanto
Virus resistance
  • papaya, squash, potato
  • resistance gene from a virus

10
Whats Being Looked at Today in the Biotechnology
Labs.
  • Healthcare
  • 130 medicines and vaccines
  • 350 products in clinical trials
  • Environmental Cleanup
  • Microorganisms to clean-up waste
  • Industrial Processes
  • Reduce impact of processes in cleaning, textile
    and paper industries
  • Food Applications
  • Enzymes for cheese, yogurt, baked goods, wine
  • Agriculture
  • Insect control
  • Other agronomic traits fusarium, leaf
    rust, drought and salt tolerance
  • Improved Quality of grains
  • Food applications
  • Animal Healthcare and
  • Marine Life

Source Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO)
11
Bacterial and Animal Biotechnology Products
Biotech chymosin
  • enzyme used to curdle milk products
  • gene from yeast
  • harvested from GE bacteria
  • replaces the calf enzyme

Source Chr. Hansen
bST (bovine somatotropin)
  • increases milk production
  • gene from cow
  • protein harvested from GE bacteria
  • replaces cow protein originally
  • harvested from pituitary glands
  • of slaughtered cows

Source Rent Mother Nature
12
Next Generation of Ag Biotech Products
Golden Rice
  • Increased Vitamin A content
  • Transgenes from bacteria and daffidol
  • Controversory large amount needed to
  • solve problem and is a culture issue!!

Sunflower
  • White mold resistance
  • Resistance gene from wheat

Source Minnesota Microscopy Society
13
Environmental Applications
Indicator bacteria
  • contamination is detected in the environment
  • microbes sensitive to certain pollutants

Bioremediation
  • cleanup contaminated sites
  • uses microbes designed to degrade
  • the pollutant

14
Land Mine Detection
Without this effort, that is dangerous to
our military,
children are maimed.
15
Land Mine Detection
  • How biotechnology helps
  • Patented transgene added to plants
  • When metal from mine is detected
  • Plant turns from green to red
  • Technology developed by Aresa Biodetection

Mine detected
16
Biotechnology and Health
Product Use
Insulin Diabetes
Interferon Cancer
Interleukin Cancer
Human growth hormone Dwarfism
Neuroactive proteins Pain
17
Edible Vaccines A Biopharming Dream Biotech
Plants Serving Human Health Needs
  • A pathogen protein gene is cloned
  • Gene is inserted into the DNA of plant (potato,
    banana, tomato)
  • Plant must be isolated and highly regulated!
  • Humans eat the plant
  • The body produces antibodies against pathogen
    protein
  • Human are immunized against the pathogen
  • Examples
  • Diarrhea
  • Hepatitis B
  • Measles

18
Future Health-related Biotech Products
Vaccines
  • Herpes
  • hepatitis C
  • AIDS
  • malaria

Tooth decay
  • Streptococcus mutans, the mouth bacteria
  • releases lactic acid that destroys enamel
  • engineered Streptococcus mutans
  • does not release lactic acid
  • destroys the tooth decay strain
  • of bacteria

19
Top Biotechnologies In The Future
  • Nutritionally Enriched Crops
  • Malnutrition is widespread
  • Malnutrition is associated with many diseases
  • Modification of staple crops necessary
  • to solve the problem

20
Precautionary Principle Why Europe Regulates
Biotech Products
  • Precautionary Principle States
  • Commercial activities can be restricted by
    governments
  • IF a scientific or environment risk is perceived
  • EVEN IF conclusive data is NOT YET available
  • It is
  • A key principle that underlies European Union
    approaches
  • to regulating biotech products
  • Incorporated into the Maastricht Treaty that
    lead to
  • the formation of the EU

21
Precautionary Principle
Effects of Applying the Principle
  • The principle makes it difficult to
  • determine when risk avoidance should take
    precedence
  • over the general welfare
  • At its most basic, the principle
  • Regulates mans excitement of the new and novel
  • Can prevent the most unexpected damage from
    occurring
  • As interpreted the principle requires that
  • Biotech products should be regulated until
  • compelling evidence proves they are safe

22
What Would Lead to Acceptance of GMO Products?
Significantly Lower Prices
  • Norway (2003 study)
  • Consumers would buy the product over non-GMO
    bread
  • If the cost of GMO bread 49.5 lower
  • Japan (2004 study)
  • Consumers would preferentially buy GMO-base
    product
  • If the cost of GMO noodles was gt50 lower
  • England (2001 study)
  • Men would pay 26 extra to avoid GMO technology
  • Woman would pay 49 extra to avoid GMO technology

Data quoted from AgBioForum (2004) 770-75
23
Other Attitudes Toward Biotechnology
Developing Countries
  • China
  • Will pay
  • 16 premium for GM oil
  • 38 premium for GMO rice
  • 35 premium for processed GMO potato products
  • Colombia
  • 66 would try GMO products
  • GMO products most favorable to those with
    limited
  • access to high quality food

Data quoted from AgBioForum (2004) 770-75
24
Why Are Attitudes Different??
  • In these countries,
  • An urgent need for available, nutritious food of
  • good quality exitsted
  • Individuals trusted their government
  • Science in general had a positive public opinion
  • These attitudes are opposite of those expressed
    in
  • European public opinion pools.

Data quoted from AgBioForum (2004) 770-75
25
Thanks for your attentionANY QUESTIONS
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