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Are European Environmentalists Responsible for Brazilian Forest Fires?

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EU animal feed import demands pressures crop producing nations

European based environmental organizations were some of the first organizations to publicly advocate against the commercial introduction of genetically modified (GM) crops over 20 years ago. Since this time, these environmental groups have intensively lobbied to have GM crop production banned in the EU. Today, they’ve been successful in that effort, as Portugal and Spain are the only two GM crop producing countries in the EU, with less than 200,000 hectares of GM corn.

Why do GM crops matter in relation to the Brazilian forest fires?

The answer is trade and land. Corn and soy are two vital inputs required to feed livestock. To ensure sufficient livestock feed is available to feed Europe’s livestock, the EU imports millions of tons of GM corn and soy each year. Significant volumes of imported animal feed come from Brazil. The EU imports about 25-30 millions of tons of GM corn and soy annually due to its own inability to produce enough corn or soy to feed its own livestock. Currently, the EU imports 36% of its soybean imports from Brazil. EU corn imports from Brazil for July and August show a 3,000,000% increase over corn imports from last year. GM corn and soybeans grown benefit producers, as they have higher yields and require fewer chemical inputs. GM corn has been found to have yields that can be up to 25% higher than non-GM varieties.

Over the past 10-15 years, corn production in Brazil has increased from 40 million tons to 100 million, and soybean production has increased from 75 million tons to 120 million tons. As demand for corn and soy rises in other parts of the world, Brazilian farmers see opportunities in planting more acres of both crops and will clear more land to enable higher production. The present concern over the number of forest fires burning in Brazil is that fires are in part creating more land to produce crops.

European policy supports deforestation to cropland

EU based anti-GMO environmental organizations have ensured that European farmers don’t have access to leading agronomic technologies, resulting in less efficient crop production. To date, these environmental organizations have had no problem pushing the lack of EU corn and soy production onto biodiverse rich, developing countries, such as Brazil. When the market for agricultural products responds as it should to increased demand, production rises. Suddenly these European environmental groups express horror and outrage at the amount of forest burning to grow more corn and soy. Oddly, it is their own domestic political activism that is partially to blame for the increased demand for corn and soy production and the resulting forest fires that will accomplish this.

Environmentalists can’t have it both ways. eNGOs can’t lobby to ban GM technologies domestically, then complain when the countries the EU imports products from doesn’t produce them in the way they prefer. Perhaps it’s time for EU environmental groups to reassess their opposition to GM crops.

Stuart Smyth

Dr. Stuart Smyth, is a Professor in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, at the University of Saskatchewan for over a decade. He previously held the Agri-Food Innovation and Sustainability Enhancement Chair & is the vision behind SAIFood.

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  • Environmentalists? Nope. These are only pretend environmentalists. They will not read your article. Unless it is to oppose your logic and their hypocrisy will not even faze them. They are used to it.

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