"Chemical titans say they have what farmers need to fight superweeds, but will they only be adding to a growing problem?"
"It all started innocently enough seven or eight years back, recalls Philip Shaw, a farmer near Dresden.
Preparing to plant a field of soybeans one day on his 350 hectares in the heart of southwest Ontario, he puzzled over what was later confirmed to be a brand new breed of mutant weed, one of the very first in Canada.
The species was a common Giant Ragweed, but this particular Ambrosia trifid L. refused to surrender to Shaw's repeated assaults with the reliable old herbicide glyphosate.
The darn weed was practically indestructible and, with some hardy cohorts, would eventually grow back and ruin his soybeans."
Ian MacLeod reports for the Ottawa Citizen May 12, 2012.
SEE ALSO:
"'Big Farma' Companies Seek Federal Approval of 2,4-D-Resistant Corn, Soybean Seeds" (Ottawa Citizen)
"Monsanto's Deep Roots In Washington" (OpenSecrets.org)
"Monsanto Funds University Communications Chair" (McClatchy-Tribune/St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
"Monsanto's Minions in California" (Organic Consumers Association/Truthout)
"Farming Groups Supporting Dow's Controversial Genetically Modified Corn Have Financial And Executive Backing From Agricultural Biotech Industry" (International Business Times)
"How the Times of India Colluded with Monsanto in Fake Reports of Bt Cotton Successes" (Counterpunch)
"More on Genetically Modified Crops" (Council on Foreign Relations)
"Ministry Blames GMO Cotton for Indian Farmer Suicides" (Digital Journal)
"India Does Not Blame Bt Cotton for Farmer Suicides" (Ag Professional)