Golden Rice: Scientific Realities

By Claire Robinson & Brian John | Farm Wars


Golden Rice is not a realistic solution to the problem of malnutrition and could well create further serious problems for the people who grow and eat it.


Golden Rice (GR) is genetically engineered to contain increased levels of beta-carotene, a precursor of vitamin A (also known as provitamin A). The rice is claimed to help cure blindness and other illnesses caused by vitamin A deficiency in the Third World. It is also claimed that opposition to GR by environmentalists and anti-GMO activists has caused millions to die or go blind in the developing world.


However, the claims made for and about GR are factually incorrect and unscientific.


GR is still not ready


While there have been long delays in the development of GR since it was invented in 2000 (1), this has not been due to the activities of anti-GMO activists, but to basic R&D problems.


This is confirmed in a statement by the International Rice Research Institute, the main body working on the GR project (2). According to the Institute, the time frame for developing a new product is about 13 years, and GR is still under development and evaluation. In September 2013 the IRRI expected GR to take another two years before it was ready.


GR is not needed


GR is an expensive and unproven solution to a problem for which better solutions exist. It has swallowed millions in development money and yet is still not ready.


In contrast, World Health Organisation programs to combat vitamin A deficiency are cheap, already available and proven to work. They focus on methods such as educating people to grow green leafy vegetables in kitchen gardens, encouraging breastfeeding of babies, and giving supplements and fortified foods when necessary.(3) Research by Dr Vandana Shivas organization Navdanya in India has calculated that green leafy vegetables are up to 3500% richer in beta-carotene than GR.(4)


These programs only need modest funding to roll out more widely. They have the additional advantage of simultaneously treating other nutritional deficiencies, as these do not occur in isolation. For example, beta-carotene can only be absorbed by the body if the person eats enough fat. Will GR proponents give out dietary fat with the GR to those who need it?


Other problems with GR include:


1. Hidden Information on GRs Genetic Makeup


There has been no adequate characterisation of GR in the peer-reviewed literature (5). Where there is secrecy, there is mistrust.


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Source Article from http://redicecreations.com/article.php?id=28581

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