Some US Farmers Get Behind Mexico’s GMO Corn Ban, Reports Mexican Daily La Jornada

“We believe that Mexico has every right to ask for what it wants,” says Lynn Clarkson, chief executive of Illinois-based Clarkson Grain company. “As a supplier, the United States should give its customers what they want.”

What Mexico, one of the biggest buyers of US corn, wants is to grow its own non-GM corn and import only non-GM corn to meet domestic demand. Its reasons for doing so include protecting the health of the population, the environment and Mexico’s genetic diversity of maize. Loss of that diversity would have “direct repercussions on the diversity of maize and ecosystems in all of North America and the rest of the world,” concluded a 2015 paper by the Commission of Environmental Cooperation, the environmental side accord to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

But Mexico’s proposed ban on GMO corn poses a direct threat to the profits and power of the world’s biggest seeds and chemicals manufacturers. If Mexico were to ban GMO imports, it would also send a message to other countries in Latin America, one of the biggest markets for GMO crops, that there are alternatives available. And those alternatives do not offer the same juicy proprietary perks as GMO seeds.

Strange Behavior for a Supposedly Capitalist Nation

This is why the US has launched a trade dispute against Mexico for seeking to phase out the importation and use of genetically modified corn and glyphosate, a probable carcinogen, on health, environmental and food self-sufficiency grounds. But as an article in the left-leaning Mexican daily La Jornada notes (translation by yours truly), not all farmers in the US oppose the Mexican government’s stance:

Clarkson Grain is a small company compared to many of its US counterparts, but in its sector it is a pioneer in the production and sale of organic and non-GMO corn and soybeans.

The Clarkson executive is an expert in non-GMO agriculture and has previously served on advisory panels for the US Department of Agriculture and the US Office of Commerce.

She says it is extremely strange for a nation that claims to be capitalist to be denying the customer what it wants.

Bill Freese, science policy adviser at the Washington DC-based non-profit Center for Food Safety, puts it in even starker terms:

It is scandalous that the United States is trying to force Mexico to accept transgenic corn with glyphosate residue, Freese said in an interview with La Jornada .

“We think that the United States should stop bullying Mexico to import this type of corn. Mexico is a sovereign country that must decide what to import or not.”

Freese believes that Mexico is doing the world a favor by raising concerns about GM corn. It is clear that glyphosate is a known carcinogen, he says.

AMLO Blinks

As regular readers know, Mexico is one of the biggest buyers of U.S. corn, consuming around 17 million tonnes of mostly GM yellow corn annually, mostly for animal feed. But on December 31, 2020 Mexico’s President Andrés Manual Lopéz Obrador (aka AMLO) published a decree calling for all imports of GMO crops, including corn, and glyphosate to be phased out by the end of January 2024. Crucially, the decree enjoys the support of Mexico’s Supreme Court, which in 2021 ratified the Precautionary Measure that bans permits to sow genetically modified corn in Mexico.

But the ban on GMO imports would also hurt US farmers, global Big Ag companies and biotech behemoths. More than 92% of the corn grown in the States is GMO. Domestically, almost all of it is used as animal feed or to produce ethanol and processed food such as corn syrup. The rest is exported, roughly a quarter of which goes to Mexico.

“Most farmers, my generation and younger, have never even used conventional corn. We’re not set up to do it. We don’t have the equipment to do it,” Hinkel Farms’ Elizabeth Hinkel told FOX Business’ Madison Alworth on “Mornings with Maria“. “So it would be a huge investment if we had to go back to growing conventional. And on top of that, our yields would be decreased.”

As I reported in my Feb 2 piece,  “Is the Unstoppable Force of Mexico’s GMO Ban About to Meet the Unmovable Object of US Big Ag Lobbies?“, Mexico and the US Department of Agriculture were heading for a head-on collision over Mexico’s proposed GMO ban.

At some point, something has to give; one side must blink. One can only hope, for the sake of Mexico and the world at large, it isn’t AMLO.

A lot has happened since then. Amid ratcheting pressure from the US side, AMLO’s government did eventually crack, albeit only partially. On February 13, it issued a new presidential decree that rowed back certain key elements of the original decree banning the importation of GMO products (including corn) and the use of glyphosate.

Crucially, the new decree allows for the continued importation of genetically modified yellow corn as long as it is used as animal feed or in processed food for human consumption. Any ban on GM feed corn would only be implemented incrementally, pending a full review of the science and the availability of adequate supplies of non-GM corn. The decree also retains plans to prohibit use of GMO corn for direct human consumption (i.e. in dough and tortillas) as well as the herbicide glyphosate, the deadline for which was brought forward to March 31, 2024.

Mexico also reserves the right to adopt precautionary measures it deems important to safeguard public health and the environment, including the genetic integrity of its full diversity of native corn. But as the land and food rights expert Timothy A Wise wrote a few weeks ago, “precaution” is a dirty word to US industry and government officials.

Given that almost all Mexican imports of GMO yellow corn are used in animal feed or industrial food processes, the decree represented a significant concession in Mexico’s standoff with the US. As El País reported at the time, the AMLO government had “relaxed its ruling on the prohibition of GMO corn in the country.” Also, “it eliminates the deadline to end the use of transgenic seed for animal fodder and industry, which had been set for January 2025.”

In other words, it gives US farmers plenty of additional time to rethink their business model, should they choose to do so. Yet even that was not enough to appease Mexico’s USMCA partners, the US and Canadian governments. On March 15, U.S. Trade Representative Katherina Tai confirmed that Washington is seeking consultation with Mexican authorities on the country’s plans to ban genetically engineered corn from human consumption…

Read the full article on Naked Capitalism

Leave a Comment

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s