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A multi-agency group
involving government departments and trading bodies as
well as the industry has been set up under the aegis of
the Textiles Ministry to promote organic cotton in the
country. If the Textiles Ministry promoting organic cotton
and the Department of Biotechnology promoting genetically
engineered Bt cotton are at odds with each other and
working at cross purposes, it should not surprise anyone,
since it is the norm rather than the exception for
government departments to work in isolation, without any
coordination and in ways that contradict each other. This
is not the first case in which the proverbial left hand
does not know what the right hand is doing, nor will it be
the last.
Organic
produce and genetically engineered produce are mutually
self excluding commodities. A country can chose to go
either way for a given product but not both. But that does
not stop the Government of India from bumbling along in
two contradictory directions, one arm promoting a product
that will cancel out the markets of the other. If Bt
cotton were to contaminate traces of organic cotton, the
consignments of organic cotton would lose the
certification that would get them the premium price
advantage and be rejected by markets interested in buying
organic cotton.
Although
coexistence of GM and non-GM produce has been mooted as a
possible way to reconcile two contradicting situations, in
reality it has never worked. The fact is that it is
impossible to keep agricultural produce like cotton or
rice or strawberries apart once they are ready for the
market. Bt and organic cotton are as bound to get mixed up
as are Bt rice and organic rice. Gene Watch, UK, and
Greenpeace maintain a register of instances where
genetically engineered crops have contaminated
conventional or organic crops. The contamination cases run
into hundreds across the world, often with grave economic
consequences. Not so long ago, consignments of US rice
exported to several countries had to be recalled because
traces of GM rice was found in rice that was declared as
conventional, non GM rice. The cost of recall was
prohibitive but the greater damage was done to America's
future rice exports. Once countries returned the
contaminated US rice, other rice exporting nations like
Thailand entered the newly available markets in Europe,
Japan and South Korea and established themselves there.
The new
organic cotton agency has set itself the task of preparing
a road map to increase the production of organic cotton in
the country, without taking a view on what is to happen to
the promotion of Bt cotton, which it acknowledges to be
inimical to the growth of the sector they are advancing.
If government sources and Monsanto are to be believed, Bt
cotton has taken over a very large percentage of the
cotton growing area in India. So is the organic cotton
agency a story without a future? Or should India stand
back from Bt cotton and present a range of organic cotton
products to the world?
India is
home to a large diversity in cotton. It cultivates the
arboreum, the hirsutum and the barbadense
cottons. Not many would associate the North-East of India
with cotton, but the famed arboreum cotton of the Garo
Hills in present Meghalaya was well known for its large,
elongated bolls and strong fibres. Apart from the genetic
diversity, there exists a great deal of indigenous
knowledge about the cultivation of cotton and the
processing of the fibre into fabric. Remember, cotton is
an ancient Indian product, its quality famed and desired
through the ancient world. There have been attempts to
grow cotton with naturally coloured fibres so that the
fabric does not have to be dyed. This approach is in line
with organic cotton. Cotton is well understood in India.
Organic cotton would be its USP because of a combination
of past and present skills. And then there is the market.
The
Cotton Advisory Board has set up this special organic
cotton group to take advantage of the rapidly growing
market for textiles made from organic cotton. Such
textiles command a premium price in countries of Europe
and in the US and Japan. The global market for organic
cotton is growing by as much as 150 per cent per year,
going by last year's figures. India is the No.1 producer
of organic cotton in the world, followed by Syria, Turkey
and China. It would make sense for India to follow the
route of organic cotton where it is already a market
leader in a product for which an assured market exists
already and is growing. The story of cotton in India must
be scripted by the ground reality of the market. |