By REINIR PADUA
A recent survey conducted by the Philippine
Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) showed that majority of
Filipino consumers and farmers are likely to accept genetically
modified rice once it is ready for release for cultivation in
the country.
Based on the PhilRice survey conducted with
the Strive Foundation, 63 percent of the respondents accept GM
rice.
As for the specifics, 64 percent are for GM
pesticide-resistance rice, while a higher 69 accept biofortified
rice.
The survey showed that 58 percent of the
respondents said they were willing to plant, buy and sell while
nine percent said they were not willing to do the same.
Thirty-two percent of the respondents gave a conditional yes.
This assessment of GM rice involved 1,000
farmers and consumers randomly chosen in Isabela, Nueva Ecija,
Iloilo, Davao del Sur and Davao del Norte.
The PhilRice survey came after the
environmental group Greenpeace Southeast Asia was able to secure
a temporary restraining order on the approval of an application
not for cultivation but for "food, feed and processing" of
Bayer’s LL62 rice.
The TRO stops the approval of the application
for the rice variety for 20 days prior to the start of the
hearings today for the petition for preliminary injunction filed
by Greenpeace.
Director Alicia Ilaga of the Department of
Agriculture’s Biotechnology Program Office said the survey only
showed that farmers are now eager to try the new rice variety to
reduce cost and losses caused by pests.
Expected to be released commercially for
cultivation is the so-called "3-in1" rice being studied by
PhilRice and funded by the DA BPO.
According to Ilaga, experts believe this
first GM rice in the Philippines will pass all regulatory
requirements for commercial release.
The "3-in-1 rice" is the first of its kind in
the country because it will be "stacked" with a combination of
traits – insect-resistance and herbicide-tolerance to increase
farmers’ profitability and higher level of micronutrients to
boost the health of a rice-dependent population.
It requires the transfer of not only the beta
carotene biosynthesis into the grains of local varieties but the
genes for tungro resistance and bacterial blight resistance
through conventional breeding technique.
It is also considered a "genetically
modified-derived" rice because Golden Rice, as one of its
parents, is the result of genetic engineering that involved the
deliberate artificial introduction of foreign genes from other
plant species that enabled Golden Rice to produce beta carotene
in the grain.
The PhilRice survey also showed that between
30 percent and 33 percent of the respondents were aware of rice
biotechnology and genetic engineering, while 17 percent of all
respondents heard about GMOs.
Among the respondents, urban consumers had
higher level of awareness on GMO, GE and rice biotechnology
compared to rural consumers and farmers, the survey revealed.
The survey also showed that 15 percent of respondents have
heard about the potential risks and benefits of biotechnology.
Majority (85 percent) of the respondents expressed their desire
to know more about rice biotechnology through radio, television
and newspapers.