| Literature DB >> 24637520 |
Graham Brookes1, Peter Barfoot1.
Abstract
A key part of any assessment of the global value of crop biotechnology in agriculture is an examination of its economic impact at the farm level. This paper follows earlier annual studies which examined economic impacts on yields, key costs of production, direct farm income and effects, and impacts on the production base of the four main crops of soybeans, corn, cotton and canola. The commercialization of genetically modified (GM) crops has continued to occur at a rapid rate, with important changes in both the overall level of adoption and impact occurring in 2012. This annual updated analysis shows that there have been very significant net economic benefits at the farm level amounting to $18.8 billion in 2012 and $116.6 billion for the 17-year period (in nominal terms). These economic gains have been divided roughly 50% each to farmers in developed and developing countries. GM technology have also made important contributions to increasing global production levels of the four main crops, having added 122 million tonnes and 230 million tonnes respectively, to the global production of soybeans and maize since the introduction of the technology in the mid-1990s.Entities:
Keywords: cost; genetically modified crops; income; production; yield
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24637520 PMCID: PMC5033197 DOI: 10.4161/gmcr.28098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GM Crops Food ISSN: 2164-5698 Impact factor: 3.074
Table 1. GM HT soybeans: summary of average farm level economic impacts 1996–2012 ($/hectare)
| Country | Cost of technology | Average farm income benefit (after deduction of cost of technology) | Type of benefit | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Romania (to 2006 only) | 50–60 | 104 | Small cost savings of about $9/ha, balance due to yield gains of +13% to +31% | Brookes (2005) |
| Argentina | 2–4 | 22 plus second crop benefits of 213 | Cost savings plus second crop gains | Qaim and Trazler (2005) |
| Brazil | 11–25 | 34 | Cost savings | Parana Department of Agriculture (2004) |
| USA | 15–39 | 38 | Cost savings | Marra et al. (2002) |
| Canada | 20–40 | 20 | Cost savings | George Morris Center (2004) |
| Paraguay | 4–10 | 17 plus second crop benefits of 213 | Cost savings | Based on Argentina as no country-specific analysis identified; impacts confirmed by industry sources and herbicide costs updated 2009 onwards from herbicide usage survey data (AMIS Global) |
| Uruguay | 2–4 | 22 | Cost savings | Based on Argentina as no country-specific analysis identified. Impacts confirmed by industry sources and herbicide costs updated 2009 onwards from herbicide usage survey data (AMIS Global) |
| South Africa | 20–30 | 4 | Cost savings | As there are no published studies available, based on data from industry sources and herbicide costs updated 2009 onwards from herbicide usage survey data (AMIS Global) |
| Mexico | 20–25 | 48 | Cost savings plus yield gain in range of +2% to +13% | Monsanto unpublished annual monitoring reports and personal communications |
| Bolivia | 3–4 | 80 | Cost savings plus yield gain of +15% | Fernandez W et al. (2009) |
| US and Canada | 47–65 | 149 (US) | Cost savings as first generation plus yield gains in range of +5% to +11% | As first generation GM HT soybeans plus farm level survey data from Monsanto USA (2011 and 2012) |
(1) Romania stopped growing GM HT soybeans in 2007 after joining the European Union, where the trait is not approved for planting. (2) The range in values for cost of technology relates to annual changes in the average cost paid by farmers. It varies for reasons such as the price of the technology set by seed companies, exchange rates, average seed rates and values identified in different studies. (3) For additional details of how impacts have been estimated, see examples in Supplemental Materials, Appendix 1.
Table 2. GM HT maize: summary of average farm level economic impacts 1996–2012 ($ per hectare)
| Country | Cost of technology | Average farm income benefit (after deduction of cost of technology) | Type of benefit | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 15–30 | 21 | Cost savings | Carpenter and Gianessi (2002) |
| Canada | 17–35 | 11 | Cost savings | Monsanto Canada (personal communications) and updated annually since 2008 to reflect changes in herbicide prices and usage |
| Argentina | 16–20 | 90 | Cost savings plus yield gains over 10% and higher in some regions | Personal communication from Monsanto Argentina, Grupo CEO and updated since 2008 to reflect changes in herbicide prices and usage |
| South Africa | 10–18 | 1 | Cost savings | Personal communication from Monsanto South Africa and updated since 2008 to reflect changes in herbicide prices and usage |
| Brazil | 17–32 | 58 | Cost savings plus yield gains of +1% to +7% | Galveo (2010, 2012, and 2013) |
| Colombia | 22–24 | 17 | Cost savings | Mendez et al. (2011) |
| Philippines | 24–47 | 40 | Cost savings plus yield gains of +5% to +15% | Gonsales et al. (2009) |
(1) The range in values for cost of technology relates to annual changes in the average cost paid by farmers. It varies for reasons such as the price of the technology set by seed companies, exchange rates, average seed rates and values identified in different studies. (2) For additional details of how impacts have been estimated, see examples in Supplemental Materials, Appendix 1.
Table 3. GM HT cotton summary of average farm level economic impacts 1996–2012 ($/hectare)
| Country | Cost of technology | Average farm income benefit (after deduction of cost of technology) | Type of benefit | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 13–82 | 22 | Cost savings | Carpenter and Gianessi (2002) |
| South Africa | 15–32 | 33 | Cost savings | Personal communication from Monsanto South Africa and updated since 2008 to reflect changes in herbicide prices and usage |
| Australia | 32–131 | 30 | Cost savings | Doyle et al. (2003) |
| Argentina | 17–30 | 40 | Cost savings | Personal communication from Monsanto Argentina, Grupo CEO and updated since 2008 to reflect changes in herbicide prices and usage |
| Brazil | 37–52 | 91 | Cost savings plus yield gains of +2% to +4% (-2% 2012) | Galveo (2010, 2012, and 2013) |
| Mexico | 29–72 | 177 | Cost savings plus yield gains of +3% to +18% | Monsanto Mexico annual monitoring reports |
| Colombia | 96–187 | 101 | Cost savings plus yield gains of +4% | Monsanto Colombia annual personal communications |
(1) The range in values for cost of technology relates to annual changes in the average cost paid by farmers. It varies for reasons such as the price of the technology set by seed companies, exchange rates, average seed rates, the nature and effectiveness of the technology (e.g., second generation “Flex” cotton offered more flexible and cost effective weed control than the earlier first generation of HT technology) and values identified in different studies. (2) For additional details of how impacts have been estimated, see examples in Supplemental Materials, Appendix 1.
Table 4. Other GM HT crops summary of average farm level economic impacts 1996–2012 ($ per hectare)
| Country | Cost of technology | Average farm income benefit (after deduction of cost of technology) | Type of benefit | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | 12–33 | 52 | Mostly yield gains of +1% to +12% (especially Invigor canola) | Sankala and Blumenthal (2003 and 2006) |
| Canada | 18–32 | 51 | Mostly yield gains of +3% to +12% (especially Invigor canola) | Canola Council (2001) |
| Australia | 22–41 | 55 | Mostly yield gains of +12% to +22% (where replacing triazine tolerant canola) but no yield gain relative to other non GM (herbicide tolerant canola) | Monsanto Australia (2009) |
Notes: (1) In Australia, one of the most popular type of production has been canola tolerant to the triazine group of herbicides (tolerance derived from non GM techniques). It is relative to this form of canola that the main farm income benefits of GM HT (to glyphosate) canola has occurred. (2) InVigor’s hybrid vigour canola (tolerant to the herbicide glufosinate) is higher yielding than conventional or other GM HT canola and derives this additional vigour from GM techniques . (3) The range in values for cost of technology relates to annual changes in the average cost paid by farmers. It varies for reasons such as the price of the technology set by seed companies, exchange rates, average seed rates and values identified in different studies. (4) For additional details of how impacts have been estimated, see examples in Supplemental Materials, Appendix 1.
Table 5. Average (%) yield gains GM IR cotton and maize 1996–2012
| Maize insect resistance to corn boring pests | Maize insect resistance to rootworm pests | Cotton insect resistance | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | 7.0 | 5.0 | 9.9 | Carpenter and Gianessi (2002) |
| China | N/a | N/a | 10.0 | Pray et al. (2002) |
| South Africa | 11.6 | N/a | 24.0 | Gouse et al. (2005, 2006a, and 2006b) |
| Honduras | 23.6 | N/a | N/a | Falk Zepeda et al. (2009 and 2012) |
| Mexico | N/a | N/a | 10.0 | Traxler et al. (2001) |
| Argentina | 6.3 | N/a | 30.0 | Trigo (2002) |
| Philippines | 18.4 | N/a | N/a | Gonsales (2005) |
| Spain | 10.4 | N/a | N/a | Brookes (2003 and 2008) |
| Uruguay | 5.6 | N/a | N/a | As Argentina (no country-specific studies available and industry sources estimate similar impacts as in Argentina) |
| India | N/a | N/a | 36.0 | Bennett et al. (2004) |
| Colombia | 21.4 | N/a | 21.0 | Mendez et al. (2011) |
| Canada | 7.0 | 5.0 | N/a | As US (no country-specific studies available and industry sources estimate similar impacts as in the US) |
| Burkina Faso | N/a | N/a | 18.0 | Vitale J et al. (2008 and 2010) |
| Brazil | 13.0 | N/a | -1 | Galveo (2009, 2010, 2012, and 2013) |
| Pakistan | N/a | N/a | 20.0 | Nazli et al. (2010) |
| Burma | N/a | N/a | 30.0 | USDA (2011) |
| Australia | N/a | N/a | Nil | Doyle (2005) |
Notes: N/a, not applicable
Table 6. GM IR crops: average farm income benefit 1996–2012 ($/hectare)
| Country | GM IR maize: cost of technology | GM IR maize (average farm income benefit (after deduction of cost of technology) | GM IR cotton: cost of technology | GM IR cotton (average farm income benefit (after deduction of cost of technology) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | 17–32 IRCB, 22–42 IR CRW | 87 IRCB, 89 IR CRW | 26–58 | 107 |
| Canada | 17–25 IRCB, 22–42 IR CRW | 89 IRCB 106 IR CRW | N/a | N/a |
| Argentina | 20–33 | 19 | 26–86 | 191 |
| Philippines | 30–47 | 94 | N/a | N/a |
| South Africa | 8–17 | 80 | 14–50 | 192 |
| Spain | 17–51 | 214 | N/a | N/a |
| Uruguay | 20–33 | 26 | N/a | N/a |
| Honduras | 100 | 61 | N/a | N/a |
| Colombia | 43–49 | 247 | 50–175 | 67 |
| Brazil | 54–69 | 83 | 34–52 | 8 |
| China | N/a | N/a | 38–60 | 361 |
| Australia | N/a | N/a | 85–299 | 211 |
| Mexico | N/a | N/a | 48–70 | 182 |
| India | N/a | N/a | 15–54 | 252 |
| Burkina Faso | N/a | N/a | 51–54 | 201 |
| Burma | N/a | N/a | 17–20 | 176 |
| Pakistan | N/a | N/a | 4–15 | 77 |
Notes: (1) GM IR maize all are IRCB unless stated (IRCB, insect resistance to corn boring pests); IRCRW, insect resistance to corn rootworm. (2) The range in values for cost of technology relates to annual changes in the average cost paid by farmers. It varies for reasons such as the price of the technology set by seed companies, the nature and effectiveness of the technology (e.g., second generation “Bollgard” cotton offered protection against a wider range of pests than the earlier first generation of “Bollgard” technology), exchange rates, average seed rates, and values identified in different studies. (3) Colombia, GM IR maize are farm level trials only. (4) Average across all countries is a weighted average based on areas planted in each user country. (5) n/a, not applicable.
Table 7. Additional crop production arising from positive yield effects of GM crops
| 1996–2012 additional production | 2012 additional production | |
|---|---|---|
| Soybeans | 122.3 | 12.05 |
| Corn | 230.5 | 34.09 |
| Cotton | 18.2 | 2.39 |
| Canola | 6.6 | 0.40 |
| Sugar beet | 0.6 | 0.15 |
Note: Sugar beet, US and Canada only (from 2008)