This paper is relevant to the impact areas in the following areas:
Crops | Cotton, Soybean |
Traits | Herbicide Tolerance, Insect Resistance |
Countries | Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, India, Mexico, South Africa, US |
Regions | Africa, Asia, Australia / NZ, North America, South America |
Tags | economics, global review, soybeam, survey |
Global adoption of transgenic crops reached 67.7 million hectares in 2003 from 2.8 million in 1996. Delivery has occurred almost entirely through the private sector and adoption has been rapid in areas where the crops addressed serious production constraints and where farmers had access to new technologies. Three countries (USA, Argentina and Canada), three crops (soybean, cotton and maize) and two traits (insect resistance and herbicide tolerance) account for the vast majority of global transgenic area. While some farmers in some developing countries are benefiting, most do not have access to transgenic crops and traits that address their needs.
This paper surveys the level and distribution of the economic impacts of transgenic cotton and soybeans to date and reviews the impacts of these crops on chemical pesticide and herbicide use. It concludes with some considerations of ways to address the development and delivery of technological innovations to small farmers in developing countries..
Paper reproduced by permission of FAO
The economic impacts of biotechnology-based technological innovations. ESA Working Paper No. 04-08. (held on an external server, and so may require additional authentication details)
CropLife International fully acknowledges the source and authors of the publication as detailed above.