Jim
Hightower: The invasion of genetically engineered eucalyptus
August 6, 2009
Listen
to Hightower's commentary
Here’s a
great idea: Let's bring into our country a genetically-engineered,
non-native tree that is known to be wildly invasive, explosively
flammable, and insatiably thirsty for ground water. Then let's clone
thousands of these living firecrackers and plant them in forested
regions across seven Southern states, allowing them to grow, flower,
produce seeds, and spread into native environments.
Yes, this would
be irresponsible, dangerous, and stupid – but apparently "Irresponsible,
Dangerous, and Stupid" is the unofficial slogan of the U.S.
Department Agriculture. In May, with little consideration of the
devastating consequences for our native environment, USDA cavalierly
rubberstamped a proposal by a profiteering corporation named ArborGen
to do all of the above.
Substantially owned
by International Paper, ArborGen shipped tissue from Brazilian eucalyptus
trees to its New Zealand laboratories, where it was genetically
altered to have more cellulose. New Zealand, however, outlaws plantings
of genetically-engineered crops, so ArborGen sought out a more corporate-compliant
country: Ours. The engineered eucalyptus was waved right into the
good ol' USA to be cloned, and it’s now awaiting final approval
for outdoor release in our land.
This has happened
with practically no media coverage or public participation. It is
happening solely because a handful of global speculators hope to
profit by making ethanol from cellulose-enhanced eucalyptus –
never mind that their self-aggrandizement would put America's native
forests in danger of irreversible contamination by these destructive,
invasive Frankentrees.
Luckily, several
scrappy grassroots groups have mobilized to bring common sense and
public pressure to bear on USDA. For updates and action items, visit
www.nogetrees.org.