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Billions Served
Three decades
after he launched the Green Revolution, agronomist Norman Borlaug is
still fighting world hunger -- and the doomsayers who say it's a
lost cause.
Reason Magazine By Ronald Bailey April 2000
Who has saved more human lives than anyone else in history? Who
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970? Who still teaches at Texas
A&M at the age of 86? The answer is Norman Borlaug.
Who? Norman Borlaug, the father of the "Green Revolution," the
dramatic improvement in agricultural productivity that swept the
globe in the 1960s.
Borlaug grew up on a small farm in Iowa and graduated from the
University of Minnesota, where he studied forestry and plant
pathology, in the 1930s. In 1944, the Rockefeller Foundation invited
him to work on a project to boost wheat production in Mexico. At the
time Mexico was importing a good share of its grain. Borlaug and his
staff in Mexico spent nearly 20 years breeding the high-yield dwarf
wheat that sparked the Green Revolution, the transformation that
forestalled the mass starvation predicted by neo-Malthusians.
In the late 1960s, most experts were speaking of imminent global
famines in which billions would perish. "The battle to feed all of
humanity is over," biologist Paul Ehrlich famously wrote in his 1968
bestseller The Population Bomb. "In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of
millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash
programs embarked upon now." Ehrlich also said, "I have yet to meet
anyone familiar with the situation who thinks India will be
self-sufficient in food by 1971." He insisted that "India couldn't
possibly feed two hundred million more people by 1980."
But Borlaug and his team were already engaged in the kind of
crash program that Ehrlich declared wouldn't work. Their dwarf wheat
varieties resisted a wide spectrum of plant pests and diseases and
produced two to three times more grain than the traditional
varieties. In 1965, they had begun a massive campaign to ship the
miracle wheat to Pakistan and India and teach local farmers how to
cultivate it properly. By 1968, when Ehrlich's book appeared, the
U.S. Agency for International Development had already hailed
Borlaug's achievement as a "Green Revolution."
In Pakistan, wheat yields rose from 4.6 million tons in 1965 to
8.4 million in 1970. In India, they rose from 12.3 million tons to
20 million. And the yields continue to increase. Last year, India
harvested a record 73.5 million tons of wheat, up 11.5 percent from
1998. Since Ehrlich's dire predictions in 1968, India's population
has more than doubled, its wheat production has more than tripled,
and its economy has grown nine-fold. Soon after Borlaug's success
with wheat, his colleagues at the Consultative Group on
International Agricultural Research developed high-yield rice
varieties that quickly spread the Green Revolution through most of
Asia.
Contrary to Ehrlich's bold pronouncements, hundreds of millions
didn't die in massive famines. India fed far more than 200 million
more people, and it was close enough to self-sufficiency in food
production by 1971 that Ehrlich discreetly omitted his prediction
about that from later editions of The Population Bomb. The last four
decades have seen a "progress explosion" that has handily outmatched
any "population explosion."
Borlaug, who unfortunately is far less well-known than doom-sayer
Ehrlich, is responsible for much of the progress humanity has made
against hunger. Despite occasional local famines caused by armed
conflicts or political mischief, food is more abundant and cheaper
today than ever before in history, due in large part to the work of
Borlaug and his colleagues.
More than 30 years ago, Borlaug wrote, "One of the greatest
threats to mankind today is that the world may be choked by an
explosively pervading but well camouflaged bureaucracy." As REASON's
interview with him shows, he still believes that environmental
activists and their allies in international agencies are a threat to
progress on global food security. Barring such interference, he is
confident that agricultural research, including biotechnology, will
be able to boost crop production to meet the demand for food in a
world of 8 billion or so, the projected population in 2025.
Meanwhile, media darlings like Worldwatch Institute founder
Lester Brown keep up their drumbeat of doom. In 1981 Brown declared,
"The period of global food security is over." In 1994, he wrote,
"The world's farmers can no longer be counted on to feed the
projected additions to our numbers." And as recently as 1997 he
warned, "Food scarcity will be the defining issue of the new
era now unfolding, much as ideological conflict was the defining
issue of the historical era that recently ended."
Borlaug, by contrast, does not just wring his hands. He still
works to get modern agricultural technology into the hands of hungry
farmers in the developing world. Today, he is a consultant to the
International Maize and Wheat Center in Mexico and president of the
Sasakawa Africa Association, a private Japanese foundation working
to spread the Green Revolution to sub-Saharan Africa.
REASON Science Correspondent Ronald Bailey met with Borlaug at
Texas A&M, where he is Distinguished Professor in the Soil and
Crop Sciences Department and still teaches classes on
occasion. Despite his achievements, Borlaug is a modest man who
works out of a small windowless office in the university's
agricultural complex. A few weeks before the interview, Texas
A&M honored Borlaug by naming its new agricultural biotechnology
center after him. "We have to have this new technology if we are to
meet the growing food needs for the next 25 years," Borlaug declared
at the dedication ceremony. If the naysayers do manage to stop
agricultural biotech, he fears, they may finally bring on the
famines they have been predicting for so long.
Reason: What are you currently working on?
Norman Borlaug: Since 1984, I've been involved in the
Sasakawa Africa Association. Our program has devised the best
package of farming practices we could with the best seed available,
the best agronomic practices, the best rates and dates of seeding,
the best controls for weeds and insects and diseases, and put them
into test plots in 14 countries. We have found that there is a large
food production potential in these African countries which are now
struggling with food shortages. The package of practices that we
have devised uses modest levels of inputs so the cost is not
particularly high compared to their traditional ways of farming. The
yields are at the worst double, nearly always triple, and sometimes
quadruple what the traditional practices are producing. African
farmers are very enthusiastic about these new methods.
Reason: Could genetically engineered crops help farmers in
developing countries?
Borlaug: Biotech has a big potential in Africa, not
immediately, but down the road. Five to eight years from now, parts
of it will play a role there. Take the case of maize with the gene
that controls the tolerance level for the weed killer Roundup.
Roundup kills all the weeds, but it's short-lived, so it doesn't
have any residual effect, and from that standpoint it's safe for
people and the environment. The gene for herbicide tolerance is
built into the crop variety, so that when a farmer sprays he kills
only weeds but not the crops. Roundup Ready soybeans and corn are
being very widely used in the U.S. and Argentina. At this stage, we
haven't used varieties with the tolerance for Roundup or any other
weed killer [in Africa], but it will have a role to play.
Roundup Ready crops could be used in zero-tillage cultivation in
African countries. In zero tillage, you leave the straw, the rice,
the wheat if it's at high elevation, or most of the corn stock,
remove only what's needed for animal feed, and plant directly
[without plowing], because this will cut down erosion. Central
African farmers don't have any animal power, because sleeping
sickness kills all the animals--cattle, the horses, the burros and
the mules. So draft animals don't exist, and farming is all by hand
and the hand tools are hoes and machetes. Such hand tools are not
very effective against the aggressive tropical grasses that
typically invade farm fields. Some of those grasses have sharp
spines on them, and they're not very edible. They invade the
cornfields, and it gets so bad that farmers must abandon the fields
for a while, move on, and clear some more forest. That's the way
it's been going on for centuries, slash-and-burn farming. But with
this kind of weed killer, Roundup, you can clear the fields of these
invasive grasses and plant directly if you have the
herbicide-tolerance gene in the crop plants.
Reason: What other problems do you see in Africa?
Borlaug: Supplying food to sub-Saharan African countries
is made very complex because of a lack of infrastructure. For
example, you bring fertilizer into a country like Ethiopia, and the
cost of transporting the fertilizer up the mountain a few hundred
miles to Addis Ababa doubles its cost. All through sub-Saharan
Africa, the lack of roads is one of the biggest obstacles to
development--and not just from the standpoint of moving agricultural
inputs in and moving increased grain production to the cities.
That's part of it, but I think roads also have great indirect value.
If a road is built going across tribal groups and some beat-up old
bus starts moving, in seven or eight years you'll hear people say,
"You know, that tribe over there, they aren't so different from us
after all, are they?"
And once there's a road and some vehicles moving along it, then
you can build schools near a road. You go into the bush and you can
get parents to build a school from local materials, but you can't
get a teacher to come in because she or he will say, "Look, I spent
six, eight years preparing myself to be a teacher. Now you want me
to go back there in the bush? I won't be able to come out and see my
family or friends for eight, nine months. No, I'm not going." The
lack of roads in Africa greatly hinders agriculture, education, and
development.
Reason: Environmental activists often oppose road
building. They say such roads will lead to the destruction of the
rain forests or other wildernesses. What would you say to them?
Borlaug: These extremists who are living in great
affluence...are saying that poor people shouldn't have roads. I
would like to see them not just go out in the bush backpacking for a
week but be forced to spend the rest of their lives out there and
have their children raised out there. Let's see whether they'd have
the same point of view then.
I should point out that I was originally trained as a forester. I
worked for the U.S. Forest Service, and during one of my assignments
I was reputed to be the most isolated member of the Forest Service,
back in the middle fork of the Salmon River, the biggest primitive
area in the southern 48 states. I like the back country, wildlife
and all of that, but it's wrong to force poor people to live that
way.
Reason: Does the European ban on biotechnology encourage
elites in developing countries to say, "Well, if it's not good
enough for Europeans, it's not good enough for my people"?
Borlaug: Of course. This is a negative effect. We always
have this. Take the case of DDT. When it was banned here in the U.S.
and the European countries, I testified about the value of DDT for
malaria control, especially throughout Africa and in many parts of
Asia. The point I made in my testimony as a witness for the USDA was
that if you ban DDT here in the U.S., where you don't have these
problems, then OK, you've got other insecticides for agriculture,
but when you ban it here and then exert pressures on heads of
government in Africa and Asia, that's another matter. They've got
serious human and animal diseases, and DDT is important. Of course,
they did ban DDT, and the danger is that they will do the same thing
with biotech now.
Reason: What do you see as the future of biotechnology in
agriculture?
Borlaug: Biotechnology will help us do things that we
couldn't do before, and do it in a more precise and safe way.
Biotechnology will allow us to cross genetic barriers that we were
never able to cross with conventional genetics and plant breeding.
In the past, conventional plant breeders were forced to bring along
many other genes with the genes, say, for insect or disease
resistance that we wanted to incorporate in a new crop variety.
These extra genes often had negative effects, and it took years of
breeding to remove them. Conventional plant breeding is crude in
comparison to the methods that are being used with genetic
engineering. However, I believe that we have done a poor job of
explaining the complexities and the importance of biotechnology to
the general public.
Reason: A lot of activists say that it's wrong to cross
genetic barriers between species. Do you agree?
Borlaug: No. As a matter of fact, Mother Nature has
crossed species barriers, and sometimes nature crosses barriers
between genera--that is, between unrelated groups of species. Take
the case of wheat. It is the result of a natural cross made by
Mother Nature long before there was scientific man. Today's modern
red wheat variety is made up of three groups of seven chromosomes,
and each of those three groups of seven chromosomes came from a
different wild grass. First, Mother Nature crossed two of the
grasses, and this cross became the durum wheats, which were the
commercial grains of the first civilizations spanning from Sumeria
until well into the Roman period. Then Mother Nature crossed that
14-chromosome durum wheat with another wild wheat grass to create
what was essentially modern wheat at the time of the Roman Empire.
Durum wheat was OK for making flat Arab bread, but it didn't have
elastic gluten. The thing that makes modern wheat different from all
of the other cereals is that it has two proteins that give it the
doughy quality when it's mixed with water. Durum wheats don't have
gluten, and that's why we use them to make spaghetti today. The
second cross of durum wheat with the other wild wheat produced a
wheat whose dough could be fermented with yeast to produce a big
loaf. So modern bread wheat is the result of crossing three species
barriers, a kind of natural genetic engineering.
Reason: Environmentalists say agricultural biotech will
harm biodiversity.
Borlaug: I don't believe that. If we grow our food and
fiber on the land best suited to farming with the technology that we
have and what's coming, including proper use of genetic engineering
and biotechnology, we will leave untouched vast tracts of land, with
all of their plant and animal diversity. It is because we use
farmland so effectively now that President Clinton was recently able
to set aside another 50 or 60 million acres of land as wilderness
areas. That would not have been possible had it not been for the
efficiency of modern agriculture.
In 1960, the production of the 17 most important food, feed, and
fiber crops--virtually all of the important crops grown in the U.S.
at that time and still grown today--was 252 million tons. By 1990,
it had more than doubled, to 596 million tons, and was produced on
25 million fewer acres than were cultivated in 1960. If we had tried
to produce the harvest of 1990 with the technology of 1960, we would
have had to have increased the cultivated area by another 177
million hectares, about 460 million more acres of land of the same
quality--which we didn't have, and so it would have been much more.
We would have moved into marginal grazing areas and plowed up things
that wouldn't be productive in the long run. We would have had to
move into rolling mountainous country and chop down our forests.
President Clinton would not have had the nice job of setting aside
millions of acres of land for restricted use, where you can't cut a
tree even for paper and pulp or for lumber. So all of this ties
together.
This applies to forestry, too. I'm pleased to see that some of
the forestry companies are very modern and using good management,
good breeding systems. Weyerhauser is Exhibit A. They are producing
more wood products per unit of area than the old unmanaged forests.
Producing trees this way means millions of acres can be left to
natural forests.
Reason: A lot of environmental activists claim that the BT
toxin gene, which is derived from Bacillus thuringiensis and
which has been transferred into corn and cotton, is going to harm
beneficial insects like the monarch butterfly. Is there any evidence
of that?
Borlaug: To that I [respond], will BT harm beneficial
insects more than the insecticides that are sprayed around in big
doses? In fact, BT is more specific. There are lots of insects that
it doesn't affect at all.
Reason: It affects only the ones that eat the crops.
Borlaug: Right.
Reason: So you don't think that putting the BT gene in
corn or cotton is a big problem?
Borlaug: I think that whole monarch butterfly thing was a
gross exaggeration. I think the researchers at Cornell who fed BT
corn pollen to monarch butterflies were looking for something that
would make them famous and create this big hullabaloo that's
resulted. In the first place, corn pollen is pretty heavy. It
doesn't fly long distances. Also, most monarchs are moving at
different times of the season when there's no corn pollen. Sure,
some of them might get killed by BT corn pollen, but how many get
killed when they are sprayed with insecticides? Activists also say
that BT genes in crops will put stress on the pest insects, and
they'll mutate. Well, that's been going on with conventional
insecticides. It's been going on all my life working with wheat.
It's a problem that has been and can be managed.
Reason: But the Cornell researchers went ahead and
published their paper on the effects of BT corn pollen on monarch
butterflies in the laboratory.
Borlaug: Several of us tried to encourage them to run
field tests before it was published. That's how science gets
politicized. There's an element of Lysenkoism [Lysenko was Stalin's
favorite biologist] all tangled up with this pseudoscience and
environmentalism. I like to remind my friends what pseudoscience and
misinformation can do to destroy a nation.
Reason: Some activists claim that herbicide-resistant
crops end up increasing the amount of herbicide that's sprayed on
fields. Do you think that's true?
Borlaug: Look, insecticides, herbicides, and fertilizer
cost money, and the farmer doesn't have much margin. He's going to
try to use the minimum amount that he can get by with. Probably in
most cases, a farmer applies less than he should. I don't think
farmers are likely to use too much.
Reason: What other crop pests might biotech control
in the future?
Borlaug: All of the cereals except rice are susceptible to
one to three different species of rust fungi. Now, rusts are
obligate parasites. They can only live under green tissue, but they
are long-lived. They can move in the air sometimes 100, 500, 800
miles, and they get in the jet stream and fall. If the crop variety
is susceptible to rust fungi and moisture is there and the
temperature is right, it's like lighting a fire. It just destroys
crops. But rice isn't susceptible--no rust....One thing that I hope
to live to see is somebody taking that block of rust-resistance
genes in rice and putting it into all of the other cereals.
Reason: Do biotech crops pose a health risk to human
beings?
Borlaug: I see no difference between the varieties
carrying a BT gene or a herbicide resistance gene, or other genes
that will come to be incorporated, and the varieties created by
conventional plant breeding. I think the activists have blown the
health risks of biotech all out of proportion.
Reason: What do you think of organic farming? A lot of
people claim it's better for human health and the environment.
Borlaug: That's ridiculous. This shouldn't even be a
debate. Even if you could use all the organic material that you
have--the animal manures, the human waste, the plant residues--and
get them back on the soil, you couldn't feed more than 4 billion
people. In addition, if all agriculture were organic, you would have
to increase cropland area dramatically, spreading out into marginal
areas and cutting down millions of acres of forests.
At the present time, approximately 80 million tons of nitrogen
nutrients are utilized each year. If you tried to produce this
nitrogen organically, you would require an additional 5 or 6 billion
head of cattle to supply the manure. How much wild land would you
have to sacrifice just to produce the forage for these cows? There's
a lot of nonsense going on here.
If people want to believe that the organic food has better
nutritive value, it's up to them to make that foolish decision. But
there's absolutely no research that shows that organic foods provide
better nutrition. As far as plants are concerned, they can't tell
whether that nitrate ion comes from artificial chemicals or from
decomposed organic matter. If some consumers believe that it's
better from the point of view of their health to have organic food,
God bless them. Let them buy it. Let them pay a bit more. It's a
free society. But don't tell the world that we can feed the present
population without chemical fertilizer. That's when this
misinformation becomes destructive.
Reason: What do you think of Worldwatch Institute founder
Lester Brown and his work?
Borlaug: I've known Lester Brown personally for more than
40 years. He's done a lot of good, but he vacillates, depending on
the way the political and economic winds are blowing, and he's sort
of inclined to be a doomsayer.
Reason: He recently said, "The world's farmers can no
longer be counted on to feed the projected additions to our
numbers." Do you agree with that?
Borlaug: No, I do not. With the technology that we now
have available, and with the research information that's in the
pipeline and in the process of being finalized to move into
production, we have the know-how to produce the food that will be
needed to feed the population of 8.3 billion people that will exist
in the world in 2025.
I don't like to try to see further than about 25 years. In 1970,
at the Nobel Prize press conference, I said I can see that we have
the technology to produce the food that's needed to the year 2000,
and that we can do it without destroying a lot of the environment.
Modern agriculture saves a lot of land for nature, for wildlife
habitat, for flood control, for erosion control, for forest
production. All of those are values that are important to society in
general, and especially to the privileged who have a chance to spend
a lot of long vacations out looking at nature. I say we can produce
enough food with the technology available and what's in the process
of being developed, assuming that we don't have all this
agricultural progress destroyed by the doomsayers. That is, we will
be able to produce enough food in 2025 without expanding the area
under cultivation very much and without having to move into
semi-arid or forested mountainous topographies.
Reason: It seems that every five years or so, Lester Brown
predicts that massive famines are imminent. Why does he do that?
They never happen.
Borlaug: I guess it sells. I guess what he writes has a
lot to do with raising funds.
Reason: Brown notes that India tripled its wheat yields in
the past three decades, but he says that will be impossible to do
again. Do you think he's right?
Borlaug: No. The projections in food production in India
continue to go up on the same slope. When we transferred the Green
Revolution wheat technology to India, production was 12 million tons
a year. Last year it was 74 million tons, and it is still going up.
Once in a while production may go down by a couple of million tons
when there's a drought, but in general it continues to go up. Also,
the increase in production has occurred with very modest increases
in cultivated area. A lot of wild land has been saved in India,
China, and the United States by high-yield technology.
India has produced enough and sometimes has a surplus in grain.
The problem is to get it into the stomachs of the hungry. There's a
lack of purchasing power by too large a part of the population.
There are still many hungry people, not dying from starvation, but
needing more food to grow strong bodies and maintain health and work
effectively. The grain is there in the warehouses, but it doesn't
find its way into the stomachs of the hungry.
Reason: What do you think of Paul Ehrlich's work?
Borlaug: Ehrlich has made a great career as a predictor of
doom. When we were moving the new wheat technology to India and
Pakistan, he was one of the worst critics we had. He said, "This
person, Borlaug, doesn't have any idea of the magnitude of the
problems in food production." He said, "You aren't going to make any
major impact on producing the food that's needed." Despite his
criticisms, we succeeded, of course.
Reason: When an alleged expert like Ehrlich is being
negative like that, does that discourage people? Does it hurt the
efforts to boost food production?
Borlaug: Sure, because we were funded by a
foundation....They'd hear his criticisms, and I'm sure there were
some people at Rockefeller saying, "Maybe we shouldn't fund that
program anymore." It always has adverse effects on budgeting.
Reason: Why do you think people still listen to Ehrlich?
One can go back and read his doomsday scenarios and see that he was
wrong.
Borlaug: People don't go back and read what he wrote. You
do, but the great majority of the people don't, and their memory is
short. As a matter of fact, I think this [lack of perspective] is
true of our whole food situation. Our elites live in big cities and
are far removed from the fields. Whether it's Brown or Ehrlich or
the head of the Sierra Club or the head of Greenpeace, they've never
been hungry.
Reason: You mentioned that you are afraid that the
doomsayers could stop the progress in food production.
Borlaug: It worries me, if they gum up all of these
developments. It's elitism, and the American people are vulnerable
to this, too. I'm talking about the extremists here and in Western
Europe....In the U.S., 98 percent of consumers live in cities or
urban areas or good-size towns. Only 2 percent still live out there
on the land. In Western Europe also, a big percentage of the people
live off the farms, and they don't understand the complexities of
agriculture. So they are easily swayed by these scare stories that
we are on the verge of being poisoned out of existence by farm
chemicals.
Bruce Ames, the head of biochemistry at Berkeley, has analyzed
hundreds and hundreds of foods, including all of the basic ones that
we have been eating from the beginning of agriculture up to the
present time. He has found that they contain trace amounts of many
completely natural chemical compounds that are toxic or
carcinogenic, but they're present in such small quantities that they
apparently don't affect us.
Reason: Would you say the Green Revolution was a
success?
Borlaug: Yes, but it's a never-ending job. When I was born
in 1914, the world population was approximately 1.6 billion people.
It has just turned 6 billion. We've had no major famines any place
in the world since the Green Revolution began. We've had local
famines where these African wars have been going on and are still
going on. However, if we could get the infrastructure straightened
out in African countries south of the Sahara, you could end hunger
there pretty fast....And if you look at the data that's put out by
the World Health Organization and [the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture
Organization], there are probably 800 million people who are
undernourished in the world. So there's still a lot of work to do.
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