Norman E. Borlaug has been described as a scientist, teacher and humanitarian.
As a scientist he is credited with developing a high-yielding, short-strawed,
disease-resistant wheat. As a humanitarian, he took these new cereal strains
to Third World Countries to feed the hungry. As a teacher he divides his
time between Texas A&M University in the fall and the International
Wheat Improvement Program in Mexico in the spring. Awarded the Nobel Peace
prize in 1970, Dr. Borlaug is a distinguished Professor of International
Agriculture.
The following is Dr. Borlaug's response address to the members of the
Board of Regents of Texas A&M University; Dr. Ray M. Bowen, President;
Dr. Edward A. Hiler, Vice Chancellor and Dean; Dr. E.C.A. Runge, Former
Head of the Department of Soil & Crop Sciences; fellow faculty members;
students; and guests, on the grounds of the newly named Borlaug Center
on the afternoon of October 8, 1999.
"I feel greatly honored to have this magnificent, superbly equipped research
facility, The Center for Southern Crop Improvement, named in my honor.
I applaud the Board of Regents, the State of Texas and the United States
Department of Agriculture for collectively making the needs and dreams
of research scientists involved in various phases of biotechnology, genetic
engineering research, and plant and forest tree breeding,become realities.
The last few days of this century are a fitting time to see this fine
facility in operation.It is an effective base from which to expand an
aggressive inter-disciplinary team effort to utilize the new methods and
tools of biotechnology, combining them with the proven skills of conventional
genetics-plant breeding to produce new and better commercial varieties
and hybrids of our crop and forest species; thereby enabling farmers,
ranchers and foresters to meet the rapidly growing demand for food and
fiber during the first three decades of the next century, and achieving
this with minimum negative impact on the environment.
Biotechnology, genetic engineering innovations over the past 25 years —
including tissue culture, gene splicing, recombinant DNA, and transgenic
engineering — have opened new horizons to control human, animal and
plant diseases and pests, as well as to further improve the productivity
of crop and domestic
animal species. These new methods and techniques have been widely accepted
and are being used commercially for developing improved strains
of
bacteria and
yeast by both western European countries and the USA, for the production
of pharmaceuticals and improvements in fermentation — for wine, beer,
and production of enzymes, e.g. chymosin for cheese production and
several other enzymes
used in
food processing.
During the 1999 crop season approximately 50 percent of the USA soybean area was
sown to varieties carrying tolerance to Round-up. About 25 percent of the area
sown to corn is used for hybrids carrying the Bt gene. Similarly about 25 percent
of the area sown to cotton is devoted to varieties containing the Bt gene.
The spread of these transgenic varieties has outpaced the ability to
inform and assure the urban consumers, especially in Europe, of the safety
of food harvested
from these varieties. Although their safety was approved under the guidelines
and regulations for safety of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
the US Department
of Agriculture (USDA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and
the Food and Drug Agency (FDA), there has been a backlash by the European
Union Countries (EU).
They threaten to embargo the importation of US soybeans, corn and cotton
seed/oil and to restrict or prohibit the use of transgenics in food processing.
This confusion
and confrontation could have been averted with proper education of the
general public and consumers. The private sector corporations in the vanguard
of developing and
commercializing transgenic varieties and hybrids have neglected informing
adequately the public consumers and urbanites of the benefit vs risks of
the new technology.
This neglect has been confused unduly by the well financed, very effective
anti-science and anti- technology propaganda of the extremists in the environmental
movement,
the neo-Luddites. It indicates clearly the USA also has a huge job on
its hands to update the functional knowledge and understanding about the
complexities and importance
of the new biotechnology and transgenic engineering for the biology
teachers of grade schools, high schools, community colleges and junior
colleges. This re-education must
be done as expeditiously as possible, and it appears to me Texas A&M has
an important role to play in clarifying the doubts about the importance
and safety/risks of the new
technologies.
The recent startling developments of the cloning of Dolly (the lamb),
Jeanie (the female calf) and Second Chance (the male calf) has been
frightening and unethical to some people,
and others have labeled them as "playing God" technologies. The appearance of the "mad cow" disease
in Europe has also contributed to the anti-science backlash in some European
countries.
Unless the faulty communication is corrected promptly it will seriously
set back the use of biotechnology and transgenic engineering.
I have great faith in the use of transgenic engineering to help solve
many problems. From the time I was a graduate student, 60 years ago, I
have dreamed that some day it would become possible to transfer the gene
or genes from rice, that makes that plant immune to the rust fungi, (Puccinia
spp) to wheat, oats, barley, rye, maize and many species of grasses. All
the important cereal grain species except rice are damaged by two or more
species of Puccinia. With new transgenic engineering this transfer can
now become reality . I also dream that the unique genes that control leaven
bread making properties in wheat will be transferred to rice, maize, sorghum,
rye, barley, oats and triticale, and that genes for cold tolerance can
be transferred from winter wheat to maize.
It's a different world. What were many impossible genetic dreams two
decades ago are now, because of the new transgenic engineering technologies,
on the verge of becoming realities."

The contact person for Dr. Borlaug is Glenda Kurten, Administrative Assistant,
Soil and Crop Sciences Department, 2474 TAMU, College Station, TX
77843-2474, email g-kurten@tamu.edu or phone (979)
845-3342.