Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Agriculture has advanced continuously throughout the ages to ensure that people have enough to eat.  In years past the majority of the worlds population were directly involved in agriculture and so they didn't fear these advancements.  That is no longer the case, at least not in the privileged countries of the world.  Here in Canada roughly 98% of the population has nothing to do with the growing of there food, excluding any small garden they may maintain.  So it should not come to any surprise that people are now afraid of what agricultural advancements might be.  The GMO, genetically modified organism, easily serves as the poster child for this disconnect between people and the food they eat.  As a farmer, who plants and grows the corn, wheat and soybeans that find there way into the stomachs of the world, I am not at all concerned about GMO grains, however, I completely respect and understand the concern.

I try to read as much as I can on the concerns of anti-GMO protesters and there organizations and find that there is a great deal of miss-information out there.  But lets be straightforward, the only reason there are GMO grains is because farmers are willing to plant them.  So as farmers we should be taking the anti-GMO voices very seriously.  When we see something wrong, correct it!  As consumers we should also be taking this seriously, when the science isn't clear or there is concern, ask questions and get answers!

To be upfront about my farm, most of my crops are non-GMO, starting this year only my corn will benefit from targeted genetic manipulation, and if I could find a high yielding corn that wasn't GMO, i would grow it.  That is because I firmly believe people should have a choice, and in the case of soybeans I can secure a significant price advantage to make the effort worth while.  So, yes, its all about the economics, I am not willing to loose money to grow a NON-GMO grain over the alternative.  Its not that I am greedy, I just hope to pay the bills with one job someday.

         Sunset over the corn field

Let us first answer a seemingly simple question, what is GMO?

Is it a plant that has had its genetics changed so that it is different in some way?  NO, thats not it.

I don't believe there is a single agricultural plant on the entire planet that has not been genetically altered.  The primary method of changes are simply selective breeding.  Farmers plant the seeds from the plants that gave them the best results.  The consequence of this selection, is the genetics of the less desirable plants are not carried into the next generation of plants.  You may argue that this is more of a genetic genocide rather than manipulation, but the end result is a breed of plant that performs differently than the previous generations.  The bad seeds are weeded out.

As agriculture advanced, so too did the breeding programs.  From picking the best we advanced to breeding the best - that is cross pollination.  This tactic allowed growers to mix the genes of one variety of plant with another, and combined with selecting the best of the results we created hybrid variety of plants.  The process of cross pollination results in somewhere between 200,000 and 500,000 genes being changed, at random, without control.  And this has been acceptable for as long as people wanted to eat.  Cross pollination alone is not, nor has ever been controlled or regulated, nature just does it all on its own.

However, if a plant has 1 specific gene that effects a specific characteristic of the plant changed by a scientist using very specific and controlled methods, its GMO.  And most GMO are exactly that, single and specific genomes being changed or added.  

Simple probability would suggest the GMO has 1/200,000 or 0.0005% a chance to be harmful compared to natural cross pollination.  Or 99.9995% likely to be safer than random pollination, and the new product goes through approval on top of that.  Its those numbers that give me the greatest confidence that a GMO grain is safe, there is just not enough difference to be otherwise.

And in the case of golden rice, where that gene causes rice to contain vitamin A, its a GMO that has the cure to prevent over 1-2 Million children from death and an additional 500,000 from developing blindness.  Its no longer a question of harm, but rather why are we willing to even consider not using GMO.

There is much more to think about when it comes to GMO, such as how it changes the farm practices in terms of pesticide use.  I will save that subject for next time.

Views: 309

Comment

You need to be a member of Ontario Agriculture to add comments!

Join Ontario Agriculture

Comment by John Van Dorp on January 17, 2014 at 1:46pm

Colin

Best read my comments again !! The terrorists that I speak of are the ones that commit illegal acts destroying property and breaking laws because they oppose GMO technology.Evidence says give farmers a good price and they will grow enough as proven by the large record breaking crop in 2013.Also it is GMO corn that broke the 300 bu/acre mark (327 bu/acre) in Ontario and 400 bu/acre mark (454 bu/acre) in the USA .The sharing of this recipe to get high yields will have farmers breaking 400 bushels in Ontario and 500 bushels in USA within this decade.But then if people do not have the money to buy food there will always be people starving around the world.There are a number of countries improving their growing knowledge changing from importers to exporters of commodities(China Brazil Argentina and others have changed).By the way I am a dealer for both organic and natural fertilizer for use on my GMO crops keeping both my quality and quantity of my crops high which I feed to my hogs.So you are entitled to your opinion as I am mine. No mud slinging intended as I speak with years of experience and research.

Comment by Colin Lundy on January 17, 2014 at 9:52am

John, Unfortunately you have just proved your own point re believing what you read no matter the source. It is very offensive to see you categorize ALL people who are against GMOs at "terrorists". Not all technologies are good just because they are new and novel. Assuming that the world cannot be fed by organic agriculture is not factual, just as assuming that GMOs are the solution to feeding the world is not factual. You only prove your ignorance about organic agriculture and about global food issues. Frankly, there is probably just as much evidence that organic agriculture can feed the world as there is evidence suggesting GMO based agriculture can. There is also substantial evidence that neither will feed the world. Who are we to say? So please stop slinging mud.

Comment by John Van Dorp on January 17, 2014 at 9:41am

It is quit clear that there is a lot of information floating around the internet and people tend to believe what they read no matter the source.Good thing there are people out there that understand what is really going on in the world of farming .The terrorists that belong to the anti gmo movement seem to think it is their right to go out and commit illegal acts to get their message out there destroying property and just simply breaking the law rather than understand the real truth  about the safeness of the GMO technology and how it is done.They would rather see people starve then accept this new technology.Then there is the organic movement that thinks it can feed the world LOL  

Comment by Gus Ternoey on January 17, 2014 at 4:20am

Excellent comment Colin,thank you.   Admittedly, as simplistic as my probability calculation was, it was more to demonstrate the point as to how much variability exists within the natural course of things.  Many of the points you have heard are not wrong, but over simplify the situation and can easily result in misinterpreting the situation.  I will definitely address some of your points in my next blog and hope to cover all of them over the next few.    For the record, I am not a geneticist or a scientist, but much of the fear about GMO stems from how they are being used, and on that I have direct experience.  Where my scientific interpretations are in question, please say so, I will happily endeavour to contact the appropriate source (and not Wikipedia or google) to clarify.

Comment by Colin Lundy on January 17, 2014 at 3:39am

Disclosure up front - I am not a scientist, nor do I fully understand the process of Genetic Engineering. Here is what I have heard that has some credence, though it may  not be true - you confirm.

  • Genetic Engineering is not exact. It is a fairly random process of trying to dislodge and replace genes. Proponents liken it to plucking specific genes to change, whereas it has more likely been bombarding genomes with the hope of something "sticking". However, I believe this is changing and it is becoming more accurate - 20 years later.....
  • Genetic Engineering is not a natural progression from selective breeding. In nature, genes from different species rarely cross, let alone from different families. Genetic Engineering can use genes from any Kingdom of life. As Genetic Engineering progresses and learns to switch genes off and on within a plant rather than crossing between organisms, the public will probably become more understanding.
  • Your probability of risk is totally simplistic. Genes do not act in isolation; so even though only one gene may be altered, it has a ripple effect with other genes. Genes interact, so changing one changes the whole genetic ecosystem. It is a microcosm of the world. If Polar bears go extinct, seals will proliferate, resulting in a crash in fish.... Same on the genome level.
  • There is lots of research out there that shows non GMO corn and soybeans are more productive and give the farmer a premium price. The only benefit of GMO so far is the reduction in costs associated with spraying, field preparation, etc as well as the potential loss to pests. Then again, GMO seeds cost a lot more and there is some research out there noting that the use of GMO seeds has ironically led to an increase in herbicide use. That will certainly become the case now that there are Roundup resistant weeds.
  • Golden rice does have its potential. But there are two problems with this argument:
  1. The more obvious one is that to date, all other products of genetic engineering have no concern with feeding the world. Most are about selling herbicides (developing a Round Up Ready corn is a great way to sell more Round Up). However, many are about pest resistance (Bt). The latter has some value except that, as with herbicide resistance, pest resistance is now building up. It amazes me that with all the dollars put into the science of genetic engineering, the number one rule of pest control is broken, excessive use of a single mode of action leads to resistance. Even more amazing is that the solution, in the case of Round Up resistance, has been to switch to 2-4-D resistance! Are we stupid!?
  2. The second is that Golden Rice perpetuates the mistake of rice monocultures. Don't get me wrong, the Green Revolution brought some benefits, but grain self-sufficiency is a narrow view of nutrition. Prior to the proliferation of chemicals people drew a lot more nutrition from their rice paddies than just rice. They also harvested leafy weeds, frogs, fish, etc (high in vitamin A and other essential nutrients). So while the rice production was lower than now, people were harvesting their total nutritional needs from their fields. Now they harvest only rice. The result? Vitamin A deficiency.
  • Oh yeah, and what about the science? I am critical of GMO critics such as Dr Huber who seemed to have abandoned science for fear. But is the science of GMO really objective? Is there truly independent science being published or is it sponsored by a corporation with a conflict of interest?

I'll admit that I am skeptical of health hazards of consuming GMOs. But I am convinced of the ecological hazards. So far, GMO crops have contributed to soil degradation, excessive use of herbicides, super weeds and pest resistance, genetic drift contaminating non GMO crops and related wild plants, loss of biodiversity, etc.

Just because the technology is novel, and based in science, does not mean it is good. Science can produce bad technologies. Genetic Engineering is one of them.

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

Harvest is Racing Ahead of the 10-Year Average

Warm, dry weather kept combines rolling across Alberta this week, pushing harvest to 77 per cent complete — a jump of 18 points from last week and well ahead of the five- and ten-year averages of 68 and 54 per cent. Southern Farms Lead the Pack The South remains furthest ahead at 84 per cent complete, followed closely by the North West (80 per cent), Peace (78 per cent), North East (77 per cent) and Central (72 per cent). While progress has been strong province-wide, most producers are now hoping for a good soaking before freeze-up to rebuild depleted soil-moisture reserves. What’s in the Bin Most early crops — winter wheat, fall rye, lentils and peas — are wrapped up. Durum is 92 per cent finished, spring wheat 89 per cent, barley 87 per cent and oats 82 per cent. Chickpeas are 71 per cent off, while mustard leads the oilseed group at 85 per cent. Canola sits just over halfway done at 56 per cent, and flax remains well behind average at 35 per cent. Crop Quality Snapshot Overall gr

Hursh: Comparing crop yields month-over-month

The Saskatchewan crop has become larger as harvest has progressed. Here are some comparisons between the yield estimates in Thursday’s crop report to the estimates made back in early September.   Only a couple crops have seen their yield estimates reduced over the past month.    Oats are down one bushel to 92 bushels an acre. Soybeans are also down a bushel to 39 bushels per acre. Barley remains the same as the provincial estimate made in early September – 71 bushels per acre and field peas are the same at 42. Other crops are up. Durum is up by 3 bushels to 41. Flax is up a bushel to 26.    The canola yield estimate is up 3 bushels to 42. Spring wheat is up one to 51 bushels. Mustard has improved by 51 pounds per acre to 1192 pounds. Canary seed is up 76 pounds to 1419. Lentils are up 128 pounds to a provincial average of 1922.    Chickpeas have the biggest price improvement going to 1817 pounds an acre, an increase of 195 pounds. In most cases, crop quality is good, but price levels

Opinion: Agriculture has always been economic driver

When one looks at the modern machinery of a Canadian Prairie harvest it seems almost like something out of a Robert A. Heinlein, or Isaac Asimov novel I might have read as a youth in the late 1960s or into the 1970s. The computer technology for recording yields on the fly, the technology that allows the combine operator – if it’s not self-driving – to take control of grain carts, the global positioning tech involved, it seems more starship than grain harvest. Such thoughts ran through this writer’s head when I was out taking photos of the Health Foundation’s Farming for Health harvest at Yorkton. But maybe even more amazing is that agriculture has already been ready to adopt new technology through the years. Really in the grand passage of time farming on the Prairies really started a mere ‘blink’ ago – remember Saskatchewan only came into existence as a province in 1905 – and at that time agriculture was still very much horse-powered – horses pulling the plows and binders and sheaf

Saskatchewan Harvest Nears Completion; Yield Estimates Still Top StatsCan

The Saskatchewan harvest is winding down, with the latest provincial yield estimates still topping the Statistics Canada projections released last month. Thursday’s Saskatchewan crop report estimated the provincewide harvest at 93% complete as of Monday, up from 84% a week earlier. That is slightly behind the five-year average of 98% but ahead of the 10-year average of 87%. Last year at this time, the harvest was 97% done. “Dry conditions over the past few weeks allowed harvest to catch up to seasonal averages,” the report said. Harvest progress is most advanced in the west-central region at 96% complete, followed by the southwest and northwest at 95%. The east-central and northeast regions are each 93% harvested, while the southeast sits at 92%. Nearly all winter cereal and pulse crops have been harvested, with chickpeas the exception at 70% complete. Spring cereals are largely off the field, with 98% of spring wheat and barley combined, along with 96% of durum and oats. Amon

Canadian Cattle Association Statement on Canada and Indonesia Signing Final CEPA Text

The Canadian Cattle Association (CCA) welcomes the signing of the Indonesia-Canada Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) by Prime Minister Mark Carney and President Prabowo Subianto as a positive step towards further trade diversification in the Indo-Pacific Region. During negotiations and leading up to the announcement, CCA worked closely with the Ministers of Trade and Agriculture and Canadian officials to receive the best meaningful market access outcome for beef, including the immediate phase-out of tariffs for many beef products. CCA was present for the announcement of CEPA during the Team Canada Trade Mission to Indonesia last fall and when Canada’s Minister of International Trade signed an associated Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between Canada and Indonesia to establish a bilateral dialogue on sanitary and phytosanitary issues to address market access issues of interest to both Parties, including in the trade of Canadian beef. “We appreciate the efforts of

© 2025   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service