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The Rural Voice, 1998-02, Page 25Old crop — new market While growers flock to genetically - altered varieties, there's a niche market for non -altered crops By Blake Patterson Today everything is becoming more specialized. Be it a television station dedicated to golf or increasing demand for high - oil corn, there seems to be a specific market for everything. Corn may still be corn today, but as bio -technology continues to provide growers with more market - specific crops, tomorrow may see growers focus more on niche markets for their crops, said OMAFRA crop specialist Brian Hall. According to Hall, genetically modified plants such as Round -Up resistant soybeans and corn borer resistant corn are just the beginning of what genetic engineering will provide agriculture in the future. Specific demand for something like high oil corn, for example, will lead to more farmers producing crops which are "specific to purpose". Hall said researchers predict bio- technology may revolutionize our lifestyle more than the computer. The change which has brought a computer into most homes may seem dramatic, but bio -technology and genetic engineering will affect things such as pharmaceutical production and could have a greater impact on our whole society. But bio -technology isn't everyone's cup of tea. That's why an 18,000 ton boatload of non - genetically modified, identity - preserved soybeans set sail from Goderich Harbour November 14 for London, England. The shipment is believed to be the first of its kind ever shipped from Canada and will supply soybeans to a European market which is becoming increasingly wary of genetically engineered beans. "It scares the living daylights out of them," said John McIntosh of Mike Snobelen Farms Limited, the Lucknow-area grain dealer which arranged the shipment. McIntosh said there is a growing market for non -genetically altered beans in Europe because there is a growing concern about anything which could impact the natural balance of the environment. In recent years, an increasing number of soybean varieties have been genetically modified to make them resistant to Round -Up herbicide. The modification allows farmers to kill all weeds in their soybean fields with one, rather several, "Environmentalists (in Europe) are so powerful they can control what is in the grocery store." chemical sprays. The fields are sprayed and all weeds are killed, but the "Round -Up resistant" beans survive. The benefit is a substantial saving. Rather than spending $30 - $40 per acre to carefully spray fields and kill specific weeds, the farmer can use one herbicide and kill all weeds for about $9 per acre. With such savings, the Round -Up resistant beans have become the popular choice of many farmers in the United States and Canada. McIntosh said the change to genetically -modified beans has been quick and dramatic. The DNA -based technology is only a few years old, but already half the soybeans produced by the 70 -million ton U.S. market are of the Round -Up resistant variety. Hall said the advantage of bio- technology is it gives farmers greater "yield stability". In the case of the corn, for example, increasing numbers of arca farmers, over the past two years, have turned to the use of corn hybrids engineered to be resistant to the corn borer. Hall said the use of genetically -engineered seeds does not increase yields directly, but they do allow farmers to better manage risk and weed control. He said knowing a crop will not be weakened by something like the corn borer gives the grower yield protection which may translate into more money. The cost of genetically - modified seed may be higher, said Hall, but if less expense is needed to fight pests and weeds, the overall production costs for a crop could be reduced. But regardless of savings for farmers, savings for consumers, or the fact the Round -Up resistant beans are considered safe, the Europeans don't want to risk allowing an "unkillable" monster to invade their environment. "Environmentalists (in Europe) are so powerful they can control what is in the grocery store," said McIntosh explaining the increased demand for unaltered beans. He added the European general public is willing to pay more to err on the side of safety. If two tubs of margarine are on the shelf, McIntosh said Europeans will pay the extra dollar for the tub labelled as "non -genetically modified." FEBRUARY 1998 21