Beijing, China
December 5, 2005
Source:
People's Daily Online
via Checkbiotech
China has taken the lead among
developing countries in the research of genetically modified
(GM) plants, an expert has said.
China has been investing 100
million US dollars per year in the research of biotechnological
plants since the beginning of this century, and the sum is
expected to reach more than 500 million US dollars in 2005, said
Shen Guifang, executive deputy director of China High-tech
Industrialization Association and researcher of
Chinese
Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
At present, more than 60 versions of GM plants are approved for
field trials and release, including China's staple crops --
rice, maize and wheat, as well as cotton, potato, tomato,
soybean, peanut and rape, she said at the "Forum of Industrial
Innovation and Agriculture Industrialization" held recently in
Yinchuan, capital of northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous
Region.
More than 30 versions of GM tomato, cotton, petunia and pimient
o have been approved for commercial production. The leading GM
plant in China is pest-resistant cotton covering 66 percent of
cotton-growing areas, Shen said.
China developed 47 GM plants in 1996, including almost all the
main food and for age plants. It has examined and approved 26 GM
plants in terms of safety between 1997 and 1999, including 16 of
pest-resistant type, nine of antiviral type and one of
quality-improved type.
China ranks the fifth -- behind the United States, Argentina,
Canada, Brazil - in the amount of genetically modified crops,
saida World Health Organization report in June. Last year it had
3.70 million hectares planted, 5 percent of the total transgenic
crop area of the world.
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