EDITORIAL

GMO dilemma: Threading ideology—food security balance in a hungry world

An absolute GMO ban risks discarding a potentially valuable tool in combating hunger globally. The goal should be a resilient and diverse food landscape, where the wisdom of the past and the tools of the future can coexist to nourish a hungry planet.

DT

The just-concluded five-day international Terra Madre festival in Bacolod City, Negros Occidental, was chosen by local anti-GMO groups for the staging of protest against a proposal by the provincial board to do away with an ordinance which has kept the province Genetically Modified Organism (GMO)-free for nearly two decades.

A broad coalition of over 80 anti-GMO groups, along with the clergy made noise during the Terra Madre in Bacolod which hosted the first Asia-Pacific edition of the world’s largest sustainable food gathering.

The GMO-Free Negros coalition of organic farming advocates saturated the festival’s venues, denouncing the ordinance proposed by the provincial board which would allow the entry of GMO facilities in the province, “undermining decades of progress in organic farming and exposing local communities to long-term, irreversible harm.”

What is GMO and what is so controversial about it? GMO refers to a life form whose genetic material has been altered using biotechnology to introduce a desirable trait, such as resistance to pests or herbicides.

This scientific intervention is at the heart of controversy across the globe, including the agriculture-rich province of Negros Occidental where over half of total Philippine sugar is produced.  

The controversy surrounding GMOs is rooted in a clash between scientific potential and socio-ecological caveats, with the clash raising a critical question: in a world grappling with hunger, is a complete ban on GMOs a prudent stance for farmers or a perilous one?

GMO proponents highlight gains, including the enhancement of food security by increasing yields and reducing crop losses. GMOs provide resistance to insects and viruses, thus protecting harvests and directly addressing hunger on a global scale.

They can reduce agriculture’s environmental footprint. Crops engineered as herbicide-tolerant enable no-till farming, thus reducing soil erosion; they can also be designed for drought resistance, a crucial trait as climate change intensifies.

GMOs do offer nutritional benefits, such as Golden Rice, which is fortified with Vitamin A to combat health deficiencies in developing nations.

What are the disadvantages, the cons, that fuel GMO opponents? There are potential environmental risks, including the unintended harm to non-target organisms, the possibility of engineered genes generating wild plant populations, and the evolution of “superweeds.”

Health concerns, though largely dismissed by major scientific bodies like the World Health Organization, persist in the public discourse, focusing on allergenicity and long-term effects.

The strongest arguments against GMOs, however, are often socio-economic.  There is legitimate fear of corporate control, as the GMO seed market is dominated by a few multinational corporations holding patents, potentially trapping farmers in cycles of debt and dependency.

For many, GMOs represent the antithesis of food sovereignty—the right of people to define their own agricultural systems.

From this perspective, GMOs are seen as creations of industrialized, corporate agriculture threatening to homogenize local crops, undermine traditional knowledge, and concentrate power away from farmers who have cultivated their land for generations.

Yet, the insistence on a complete ban demands scrutiny, especially against the backdrop of a global food crisis. In other words, ideological purity can be a luxury that the world’s poor and hungry can ill afford.

While the organic and slow-food models championed at Terra Madre are admirable and vital for biodiversity and cultural preservation, they alone may not have the scale or resilience to meet the nutritional needs of a burgeoning global population under climate duress.

A blanket rejection of GMOs ignores the spectrum of applications within biotechnology. The technology itself is a tool and its impact depends on its implementation and how the world’s hungry could gain access and benefit from it.

The farmers of Negros Occidental, and the global community at large, face a complex dilemma, a careful calculation of the pros and cons, where GMO use is concerned.

While the ideals of Terra Madre and other like movements provide a compass that can be used towards sustainability and cultural integrity, the stark reality of food insecurity demands pragmatic solutions.

The truth of the matter is that an absolute ban on all GMOs risks discarding a potentially valuable tool in combating hunger globally.

The true challenge, perhaps, is not rejecting the technology outright but building agricultural systems that harness scientific innovation while fiercely protecting ecological integrity, farmer rights and local food sovereignty.

The goal should be a resilient and diverse food landscape, where the wisdom of the past and the tools of the future can coexist to nourish a hungry planet.