A
new overview of biotech crops in 2012
FACT
# 1. 2012 was the 17th year of successful commercialization of biotech crops.
Biotech
crops were first commercialized in 1996. Hectarage of biotech crops increased
every single year between 1996 to 2012 with 12 years of double digit growth
rates, reflecting the confidence and trust of millions of risk-averse farmers
around the world, in both developing and industrial countries.
FACT
# 2. Biotech crop hectares increased by an unprecedented 100–fold from 1.7
million hectares in 1996, to over 170 million hectares in 2012.
This
makes biotech crops the fastest adopted crop technology in recent times – the
reason – they deliver benefits. In 2012, hectarage of biotech crops grew at an
annual growth rate of 6%, up 10.3 million from 160 million hectares in 2011.
Millions of farmers in ~30 countries worldwide, have made more than 100 million
independent decisions to plant an accumulated hectarage of ~1.5 billion hectares,
equivalent to 50% more than the total land mass of the US or China; this
reflects the fact that biotech crops deliver sustainable and substantial,
socioeconomic and environmental benefits.
FACT
# 3. For the first time in 2012, developing countries planted more hectares
than industrial countries.
Notably,
developing countries grew more, 52%, of global biotech crops in 2012 than
industrial countries at 48%. In 2012, growth rate for biotech crops was at
least three times as fast, and five times as large in developing countries, at
11% or 8.7 million hectares, versus 3% or 1.6 million hectares in industrial
countries.
FACT
# 4. Number of countries growing biotech crops.
Of
the 28 countries which planted biotech crops in 2012, 20 were developing and 8
were industrial countries; two new countries, Sudan (Bt cotton) and Cuba (Bt
maize) planted biotech crops for the first time in 2012. Germany and Sweden
could not plant the biotech potato "Amflora" because it ceased to be
marketed. Stacked traits are an important feature – 13 countries planted
biotech crops with two or more traits in 2012, and notably, 10 of the 13 were
developing countries – 43.7 million hectares, or more than a quarter, of the
170 million hectares were stacked in 2012.
FACT
# 5. Number of farmers growing biotech crops.
In
2012, a record 17.3 million farmers, up 0.6 million from 2011, grew biotech
crops – remarkably over 90%, or over 15 million, were small resource-poor
farmers in developing countries. Farmers are the masters of risk-aversion and
in 2012, a record 7.2 million small farmers in China and another 7.2 million in
India, elected to plant almost 15 million hectares of Bt cotton, because of the
significant benefits it offers. In 2012 over one-third of a million small
farmers in the Philippines benefited from
biotech
maize.
FACT
# 6. The top 5 countries planting biotech crops.
The
US continued to be the lead country with 69.5 million hectares, with an average
~ 90% adoption across all crops. Brazil was ranked second, and for the fourth
consecutive year, was the engine of growth globally, increasing its hectarage
of biotech crops more than any other country – an impressive record increase of
6.3 million hectares, up 21% from 2011, reaching 36.6 million hectares.
Argentina retained its third place with 23.9 million hectares. Canada was
fourth at 11.8 million hectares with 8.4 million hectares of canola at a record
97.5% adoption. India was fifth, growing a record 10.8 million hectares of Bt
cotton with an adoption rate of 93%, In 2012, each of the top 10 countries
planted more than 1 million hectares providing a broad foundation for future
growth
FACT
# 7. Status of biotech crops in Africa.
The
continent continued to make progress with South Africa increasing its biotech
area by a record 0.6 million hectares to reach 2.9 million hectares; Sudan
joined South Africa, Burkina Faso and Egypt, to bring the total number of
African biotech countries commercializing biotech crops to four. Five
countries, Cameroon, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria and Uganda conducted field trials
of biotech crops, the penultimate step prior to approval for commercialization.
The lack of appropriate, science-based and cost/time-effective regulatory
systems continue to be the major constraint to adoption. Responsible, rigorous
but not onerous, regulation is needed, particularly for small and poor
developing countries.
FACT
# 8. Status of biotech crops in the EU.
Five
EU countries planted a record 129,071 hectares of biotech Bt maize, up 13% from
2011. Spain led the EU with 116,307 hectares of Bt maize, up 20% from 2011 with
a record 30% adoption rate in 2012.
FACT
# 9. Benefits offered by biotech crops.
From
1996 to 2011, biotech crops contributed to Food Security, Sustainability and
the Environment/Climate Change by: increasing crop production valued at US$98.2
billion; providing a better environment, by saving 473 million kg a.i. of
pesticides; in 2011 alone reducing CO2 emissions by 23.1 billion kg, equivalent
to taking 10.2 million cars off the road for one year; conserving biodiversity
by saving 108.7 million hectares of land; and helped alleviate poverty for
>15.0 million small farmers and their families totaling >50 million
people, who are some of the poorest people in the world. Biotech crops are
essential but are not a panacea and adherence to good farming practices such as
rotations and resistance management, are a must for biotech crops as they are
for conventional crops.
FACT
# 10. Future Prospects.
Cautiously
optimistic with more modest annual gains likely due to the already high rates
of adoption in the principal biotech crops in mature markets in both developing
and industrial countries.
NOTE: First posted at http://www.isaaa.org/resources/publications/briefs/44/toptenfacts/default.asp)
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