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The GMO illusion: Three decades of hype, harm, and false hope

By Sridhar Radhakrishnan 

Three decades of hype, billions of dollars spent, and still no miracle crop. It's time to abandon the GMO biotech fairy tale and return to the soil, the seed, and the farmer.
“Trust us,” they said. “GMOs will feed the world.”

Picture a world where there is plenty of food, no hunger, fields grow without chemical pesticides, children are saved from malnutrition, and people live healthily.
Three decades later, the promises of genetically modified organisms lie across the fields like superweeds - costly, useless, and crowding out real alternatives. In 1995, with the approval of Bt maize and glyphosate-tolerant soy in the U.S., GMOs were touted as the silver bullet: eliminating hunger, reducing pesticides, boosting yields, and fortifying nutrition. But the dream, peddled by biotech giants and promoted by complicit research institutions, has proven illusory. 
A comprehensive exposé, Bitter Harvest – 30 Years of Broken GMO Promises, by Save Our Seeds, GM Watch, and Beyond GM, offers a reality check. Through eight meticulously documented case studies, the article lays bare a pattern of ecological harm, regulatory evasion, scientific failure, and corporate overreach.
The Pesticide Trap and the Vitamin Mirage

Let's begin with the flagship claim of pesticide reduction. Herbicide-tolerant varieties like GM soy triggered an explosion of glyphosate-resistant superweeds, pushing up pesticide use even higher. Insect-resistant Bt crops in its initial years suppressed pests and reduced spraying. But with secondary pest infestations, farmers were forced back to the pesticide treadmill. 
Then comes the poster boy of GMOs - Golden Rice. It promised to save a million children from night blindness, but failed to reliably deliver even a basic level of beta-carotene in real-world field conditions, while public health programmes quietly and effectively addressed vitamin A deficiency through proven, low-cost solutions. After decades and millions spent, GMOs remain mired in controversy and halted rollouts.
Frankenfish, Failed Forests, and Flopped Soybeans
Many other GMOs could not sustain the complexities of the real-world. GM cassava and sweet potato in Africa failed to outperform conventional crops, their performance no match for agroecological methods. AquaBounty's GM salmon, designed to grow faster and relieve pressure on wild stocks, entered the market with strong industry backing, only to face consumer rejection, labelling debates, and environmental concerns. 
In 2024, the company halted its production. Even ambitious efforts to re-engineer photosynthesis to boost yields remain stuck in labs. Forests weren't spared either: the GM blight-resistant American chestnut, heralded as a model for ecological restoration, languishes in regulatory limbo with disappointing performance during trials. And gene-edited “healthier” soy by Calyxt, launched to replace trans fats, fizzled out due to poor demand and a failed business model. The pattern is evident: slick tech meets messy reality - and fails.
India’s Cautionary Tale: Seeds of Despair
India offers its own cautionary tale. Bt cotton, once hailed as a pest-resistant breakthrough, has seen pest resurgence, pesticide dependence, rising seed costs, and increasing debts and farmer suicides, especially in high adoption zones. GM mustard, disguised as a productivity solution, is actually herbicide-tolerant, threatening ecosystems, biodiversity, and health. 
Fortunately, it did not make it to the farms and plates. Most recently gene-edited rice, pushed by the Indian Council of Agriculture Research (ICAR) with government backing, has triggered outcry for bypassing biosafety norms, ignoring farmer rights, and compromising seed sovereignty. The story repeats: techno-fixes fail, ecosystems get disrupted, farmers pay the price.
Who Benefits, and at What Cost?

Why do these “technology solutions” collapse? Because they are designed to serve corporations, not communities. They ignore ecological complexity, bulldoze regulatory checks, and reduce farming to a patent-controlled lab experiment. These are not responses to genuine needs; they are products in search of markets, driven by intellectual property, not food security or safety. We know now that these technologies are often inadequately tested, impractical, & disconnected from farmer realities. The biotech industry thrives on promises, but withers under scrutiny.
Even now, with CRISPR and new gene-editing tools being fast-tracked by governments, the biotech playbook hasn’t changed: inflated promises, regulatory shortcuts, focus on a few traits, and sweeping aside safer, low-cost farmer-led agroecological alternatives. The lessons of three decades are being wilfully ignored in the rush to resurrect the failed GMO model in a shinier avatar.
Uproot the Illusion, Sow the Future
Thirty years of failure is not just a verdict. It’s a warning. From Golden Rice to Bt cotton, from failed GM trees to floundering GM fish, the evidence is overwhelming: biotech has overpromised and under-delivered - at great cost to farmers, food, and freedom.
But beyond this illusion, something real is growing. Farmers, communities, and seed savers across the world are rebuilding food systems rooted in ecological wisdom, local resilience, and shared knowledge. Consumers, too, are pushing back - demanding food that is safe, transparent, and just. The future of food will not be written in a gene-editing lab. It will grow from the ground up.
It's time to call out the illusion, uproot the weeds of false promises, reclaim the narrative and sow the seeds of a real revolution - one that values people over patents, diversity over domination, and nourishment over novelty. This real food revolution is already underway—quiet, local, collective, and growing strong.
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Sridhar Radhakrishnan is an environmental and social justice activist. He writes on democracy, ecology, agriculture and climate concerns. He is in the Steering Committee of the Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA-Kisan Swaraj)

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