Monsanto’s Mass ‘Super Weeds’ Force Sustainable Farming
What happens when Monsanto’s modified creations get out of hand and threaten the biosphere with mutated ‘super weeds’ that continue to suffocate farmland across the entire planet? Experts call upon farmers and government officials to return to traditional sustainable farming practices — the kind without Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide. It was recently reported by the media (despite them always being quite, and NaturalSociety and others reporting on this extensively back in 2011) that a “fast-spreading plague” of the super weeds is spreading and they will not be stopped easily.
The super resistant weeds threaten not only independent family farmers and major agricultural businesses alike, but also the future of food production. Experts are now calling for a radical change in farming practices, with time-tested traditional methods being the ultimate goal. In addition, weed scientists seek to hold a ‘summit’ or panel of sorts to address the issue in Washington. As a leading task force member who is working with the USDA on the issue stated, this is a bi-product of rampant biotechnology that must be remedied by returning to traditional norms.
“We don’t have that next technology. We have to get back to the fundamentals,” said top weed scientist David Shaw.
Like many other issues, the USDA has failed to address the serious concerns presented by experts over the growing super weeds in the past. This fact is represented by the pure numeric volume of the weeds, which now span across millions of acres worldwide. Amazingly, resistant weeds currently cover over 4.5 million hectares (a hectare is about 2.4 acres) in the United States alone, though experts estimate the world-wide land coverage to have reached at least 120 million hectares by 2010. And the outcome of this hyper resistance, of course, is excessive use of further herbicides — which still yields virtually no results.
Just as with Monsanto’s other products, the USDA continues to wait until serious consequences are experienced before even considering action. Meanwhile, the agency is giving Monsanto special ‘speedy approval‘ to expedite their latest inventions into the marketplace with extreme haste.
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8 comments on "Monsanto’s Mass ‘Super Weeds’ Force Sustainable Farming"
May 22, 2012 5:37am
While I do not agree with much of what Monsanto does, it helps to get your facts straight when you knock them.
Mr Hill -- Neither Round-up or 2,4-D are meant to kill corn Rootworm. Both or those chemicals are HERBICIDES, not INSECTICIDES.
The type of GMO corn that is meant to kill rootworm is the BT corn. And BT in it's normal state is actually Organic. Yes I know that GMO is not "normal".
May 22, 2012 3:17am
The devil is in the details. The problem is unquestioned authority. Accepting off the cuff remarks as reason for policy. Unaccountability.
Monsanto is just one in a long line off good old ploys.
Our government demonstrates a serious need for us to have a public controlled government watchdog with teeth, for once. That, and get the rotund buns of industry off of the seat of power.
NO! Mr. CEO. Running a corporation does not qualify you for public service. Please leave that to the actors.
May 21, 2012 7:10pm
"super weeds"? What makes them super? Do these plants have names? Even as a work of fiction, I'd find this woefully under-researched.
May 22, 2012 3:55pm
Mr. Miller, your lack of knowing about super weeds is the problem, not the lack of research. If you type "super weeds" into a search engine, you will find much more about them that could be contained in this article. You might also try searching for 'pig weed' , it has become one of those "super weeds" you seem to know nothing about.
May 21, 2012 1:44pm
Important to look who is behind Monsanto and has been for many decades--the Rockefeller Trusts--evil incarnate!
May 21, 2012 1:12pm
Geithner's economic policy: "As long as it make a buck for big business today, who cares if kills millions tomorrow?"
May 21, 2012 12:53pm
Who pays for the poisoning of the earth, the water, the air as the result of the chemicals? Where is the regulation of corporate externality cost?
May 21, 2012 12:23pm
Monsanto and Dow Chemical are wiiling to develop new, stronger poisons to kill superweeds and superinsects with a total disregard toward their toxic effects on pollinators like honey bees, animals, and people.
2,4-D (half of Agent Orange) is going to replace Monsanto's Round Up in order to help kill the new Round Up-resistant corn rootworm.
Plutonium 239 may be next when corn rootworms develop a resistance to 2,4-D.