U.S., Brazil each expand biotech crop plantings by four pct – report

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: January 28, 2015

CHICAGO, Jan 28 (Reuters) – Farmers in the United States and Brazil, two agricultural powerhouses, last year increased plantings of biotech crops faster than the global rate of expansion for such plantings, according to a report issued on Wednesday.

U.S. farmers planted biotech crops on 180.6 million acres, up 4.3 percent from 2013, while Brazil increased biotech plantings by 4.7 percent to 104.3 million acres, the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA) said.

Globally, biotech plantings rose 3.6 percent to a record 448.5 million acres, according to the group, which promotes the use of biotechnology in agriculture.

Read Also

The Chicago Board of Trade building on May 28, 2018. (Harmantasdc/iStock Editorial/Getty Images)

CBOT Weekly: China, shutdown guiding the market

The United States grain and oilseed markets are currently dominated by two factors, said Ryan Ettner, broker with Allendale Inc. in McHenry, Ill. Ettner said those are the absence of a trade deal with China and the ongoing United States government shutdown.

In both countries, the top biotech crops included corn, soybeans and cotton.

Critics have previously accused the ISAAA of inflating planting figures in an attempt to show growing support for biotech crops, which are genetically modified to resist drought and pests and for other traits.

Some opponents of biotech crops say they lead to increased pesticide use and environmental damage and have raised concerns over human consumption.

The ISAAA “devoted considerable effort to consolidate all the available data on officially approved biotech crop adoption globally,” said founder Clive James, who wrote the report.

The group stands by its data, he added.

explore

Stories from our other publications