Monsanto Vice President
Carl Casale said today the company's seed partners are playing
an increasingly important role as Monsanto continues its
strategic transformation to a company based largely on seeds and
biotechnology traits. In his remarks today at Monsanto's 2003
Seed Partner Meeting, Casale said that while Roundup herbicide
remains a critical component of Monsanto's North American
business, its seed and trait offerings have greater potential to
add value for customers in the future. In fact, Casale said he
expects U.S. gross profit from the company's seeds and traits
businesses to surpass gross profit generated by Roundup this
year.
"When biotechnology crops were introduced in the mid-1990s,
our strategy was to broadly license our technology to seed
companies so that farmers had access to our technologies in the
hybrids and varieties they wanted," Casale said. "Today, we have
more than 300 seed companies in the United States who license
our biotech traits."
Monsanto's partnership with seed companies has provided U.S.
farmers with:
- Broad access to the latest technologies
- New technologies in quality germplasm that is best suited
to their local growing conditions
- Superior weed and insect control, delivered in one package
via single and stacked traits in the seed
- 90-plus percent overall product satisfaction as indicated
by farmers surveyed who have used the Roundup Ready corn or
soybean technology
High product satisfaction among growers using Monsanto's
herbicide- tolerant and insect-protected technologies has
resulted in an increased use of these technologies -- from 3
million U.S. acres in 1996, to more than 97 million U.S. acres
in 2002. Based on early 2003 U.S. orders, Casale projects
further adoption of biotechnology this year, including a
significant increase in stacked corn products that combine the
Roundup Ready trait with the YieldGard insect-protected trait.
Casale also noted that the value created by biotechnology
traits is being shared by several parties: Farmers benefit from
better weed and insect control, higher yield potential and lower
costs; seed partners benefit from new margin opportunities
provided via value-added seed offerings; and Monsanto benefits
from growth as its technology is used on additional acres. Seed
partners and farmers also benefit from Monsanto's reinvestment
in research- and-development (R&D) into areas that can provide
new value-added products for the future.
"As the leading technology provider to the seed industry,
Monsanto continues to invest 80 percent of our R&D dollars to
discover and develop better seeds and technology traits," Casale
said. "We're committed to working closely with our seed partners
to identify potential products that will create new avenues of
growth for our partners and their customers.
"Our seed licensees are on the leading edge of agriculture
today. They are among the first to offer growers new products,
and to take advantage of new sales opportunities in the
fastest-growing segment of agriculture," Casale concluded.