LATIN AMERICA: PATENTS, A NEW FORM OF COLONIALISM?
OTC 01.09.98 02:20
MONTEVIDEO, (Aug. 27) IPS - Latin American farmers now buy seeds made in labs in the North
from genetic material they donated in the 1970s, just as South American nations imported
British goods manufactured from their wool and leather in the 19th century.
That trend has not just continued. It has taken on huge proportions. For example, more
than half the known plant species in Brazil, one of the countries with the richest
biodiversity in the world, have already been patented by large transnationals.
At the first Latin American and Caribbean Indigenous Seminar, held this year in Mexico,
participants charged that several international laboratories have patented in Europe and
the United States the medicinal properties of 5,000 of the 13,000 plants used in
traditional indigenous medicine in the region.
It was not just that the transnational companies (TNCs) did not pay a cent for these
rights. Some of them went even further, such as one which, during its field research, took
blood samples from Mexico's Yaqui Indians to extract and synthesize an antigen that their
bodies produce naturally.
Tropical America is still a land of promise, according to experts in genetic resources,
who cites the case of Zea diplorernnis, a variety of corn that is resistant to four out of
the seven known illnesses that affect the plant.
This plant was not found growing in the forest. Scientists found it in 1997 being
cultivated on a two-hectare plot in Western Mexico's Manatlan Mountains by an indigenous
family who had been producing it for generations, and using it along with common maize as
food for their animals during the dry season.
The potential value of this corn species, from a genetic standpoint, is in the region of
billions of dollars.
In an article published in The Los Angeles Times, Alvin Toffler, author of The Third Wave
-- in which he forecast the dawning of a technology-based post-industrial era -- makes
predictions about the future of agriculture.
Toffler imagines a period in which mass agricultural production, a basic characteristic of
the Green Revolution, will be replaced by a model of agriculture in which each plant will
be monitored using satellite sensors, computerized machinery and intensive biotechnology.
The Green Revolution, spearheaded after World War II by the United States and TNCs linked
to agriculture, hinged on the improvement of soils and the intensive use of industrial
seeds and pesticides in most parts of the world.
It was often the same companies that provided the seeds, the fertilizers and pesticides.
This monopoly generated huge profits and enormous accumulation of capital.
What Toffler imagines was actually discovered by chemical TNCs almost 20 years ago. Since
then, these companies have been investing part of their profits in the development of
biotechnology and genetic engineering.
The new production pattern, called agriculture and sustainable development -- the name is
drawn from the environmentalist terminology now in vogue -- is based on the widespread,
almost exclusive use of genetically manipulated seeds produced in the laboratories of
TNCs.
Through patenting, these companies ensure that they will have a monopoly in global
agricultural production.
Transgenetic -- genetically modified -- seeds can be immune to certain herbicides,
resistant to drastic climate change, mature more rapidly or more slowly and produce
vegetables that are bigger, smaller, or have different nutritional values than the
original ones.
In order to make the huge investments required to produce these seeds, several major
transnationals have been merging. According to Enildo Iglesias, regional secretary for
Latin America of the United Food and Commercial Workers international union, "the big
race now is between two U.S. companies: Monsanto and DuPont, both of which aim to create
an oligopoly."
"In the past few months, DuPont has spent $4.8 billion buying out or buying into
various big companies," he says. "At the same time, Monsanto has been doing the
same thing in another part of the market and its investment have amounted to $5.2
billion."
In their book, "Stealing from Nature," Brazilian agronomists Sebastiao Pinheiro
and Dioclecio Luz point out that "biotechnology is going through a moment in history
in which humanity needs to reflect on its destiny."
"In no other circumstances have human beings had as much power as now," add the
two experts, who are advisors to various Brazilian environmental groups. "They have
the power of God, not just those of a medicine man. They can create plants, animals, small
and large beings, manipulate genes until something comes out."
Pinheiro and Luz say they wonder if it is ethical for "a few people to dominate the
production of food on the planet and to own life.
"Do they have the right to create beings that are going to serve their interests? Can
they go into a country, take over its biodiversity, extract the raw material and register
it in their names?"
According to statistics by the International Council for Plant Genetic Resources (ICPGR),
the 1974-1985 period saw the heaviest traffic in genetic resources, with developing
nations donating 91 percent of the samples analyzed and industrialized countries 8.8
percent.
On the other hand, the industrialized countries received 42.3 percent of the donated germ
plasm through the ICPGR, while the countries of the South received only 14.5 percent.
In an article in a book titled Biotechnology: After the Green Revolution, Canadian author
Pat Mooney argues that by 1982 the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) would report that developing countries contributed some $500 million each year to
the value of the U.S. wheat harvest.
According to Mooney, this means the real contribution made by developing countries is
greatly undervalued. If all the important harvests in North America were included in the
calculation, the contribution would be in the region of billions of dollars each year.
Developing countries also make such contributions to Europe and Australia.
Their contribution is in the form of germ plasm, the genetic characteristics added to new
crop varieties throughout the world. The North may be rich in grains, but the South is
rich in genes, the expert says.
Mooney concludes that the South donated this genetic material believing that its botanical
treasures would become part of the common inheritance of humanity, but the North has
patented the products of this legacy and now sells its seeds throughout the world, making
enormous profits.
Copyright 1998