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Biotech Corn
and Soy Crops
Gene-altered corn plantings
will increase by nearly 10 percent in 2003.
U.S. farmers are largely in favor of planting biotech corn
despite opposition from customers such as the European Union
and Japan, according to a poll conducted at the American
Farm Bureau Federation's annual meeting. Consumers from
opposing countries have voiced concerns over the long-term
health and environmental impacts of such crops.
Plantings of Roundup Ready corn, which is altered so that
farmers can use a single weed killer on the crops, will
increase by about 10 percent in 2003, while Roundup Ready
soybeans will increase more than eight percent, according to
a survey of growers at the meeting. Gene-altered cotton
plantings will increase by four percent in 2003.
Overall, biotech plantings across all U.S. crops will rise
by 2.3 percent, according to a survey of farmers. In 2002,
34 percent of corn was gene-altered, up eight percent from
the previous year, and biotech soybeans made up 75 percent
of all U.S. soybean crops, up seven percent from the
previous year, according to U.S. Agriculture Department
data.
Biotech cotton made up 71 percent of the U.S. crop in 2002,
compared with 69 percent in 2001, according to the USDA.