With 5,000 years of soybean cultivation, China, the home of the
oil crop, now has one-third of its soybean processing capacity
monopolized by foreign companies.
Archer Daniels Midland Company (ADM), an agro-giant in the
United States, alone controls one quarter of it since it landed in
China in 1992, according to Cheng Guoqiang, a researcher with the
Beijing-based State Council Development Research Center.
Coinciding with the rising trans-national control of the
country's soybean crushing industry is the skyrocketing import of
soybean, dominantly genetically-modified (GM) varieties from the
United States, Brazil and Argentina.
The year 2005 has witnessed "very serious" monopolization of
China's soybean processing industry by foreign trans-nationals like
ADM, who are speeding up their purchasing of Chinese soybean
processing facilities on a large scale, according to Cheng.
Meanwhile, 2005 is the third consecutive year in which China's
soybean imports topped the 20 million-ton level to reach 25 million
tons, well exceeding its domestic soybean output of around 16
million tons a year, according to Cheng.
All this took place without any public hearing, as might be
required in other countries. After all, public participation in
decision making, even on matters concerning their daily food
security, is still alien to many Chinese.
As the world's largest importer of GM soybean, China does not
even have a say on the market price, Cheng said.
China used to be the world's largest soybean producer and
exporter up to the 1930s, with the United States taking over in the
1950s. The real watershed for China's soybean industry came in 1996
when its soybean imports soared to 1.11 million tons from 290,000
tons the year before, while its soybean exports plummeted from
380,000 tons to 190,000 tons.
That year marked China's shift from a net exporter to a net
importer of soybean, said Wei Wei, from the Research Institute of
World Economy and Politics of Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences.
China opened its soybean market to the outside world long before
its WTO entry in 2001, with no quota but a symbolic tariff of
around 3 percent, said Zhu Xigang, from the Research Institute of
Agricultural Economy at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural
Science.
Zhu said China had to import soybean because its domestic
production, though increased in the past few years, could not meet
rapidly increasing demand for the oil crop. And the imported GM
soybean features "higher oil content, better quality and less
transportation cost."
But a professor from the University of International Business
and Economics, who declined to be identified, would not buy this
view. "It's the demand from the soybean processing industry, not
from the consumers," he said. "We were told we were short of 20
million tons of soybean a year, but we don't know where the figure
comes from and who has conducted the market survey. We as consumers
didn't really feel a shortage when we saw the sudden boost of
imports, and of all GM stuff at that."
Environmentalists also doubt if it is necessary to import so
much GM soybean even if China does have a shortage. Sze Peng
Cheung, a programme manager with Greenpeace China, an environment
watchdog, said that China does have its own non-GM soybean strains
with high oil and protein content, only it has not developed them
into industrial-level production.
But China has exported its non-GM soybean to the European Union,
Japan and South Korea, where consumers maintain strong reservations
or opposition to GM food. In Japan alone, the price of non-GM
soybean can be 5 to 10 percent higher than that of the GM product,
according to Cheng Guoqiang.
That partly explains why endeavours to boost its domestic
production of soybean have been among China's policy cards to
counter foreign monopoly. In 2003 the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA)
announced an ambitious plan to develop China's Northeast into the
world's largest non-GM soybean production centre for exports in the
next five years. If successful, China can win the Asian and
European market with its non-GM soybean products.
Yet the major challenge to this plan is whether China can keep
its non-GM soybean clean. With more wild and cultivated soybean
varieties than anywhere in the world, China forbids any GM soybean
to be grown inside its boundaries, said Chang Ruzhen from the
Institute of Crop Germplasm Resources at the Chinese Academy of
Agricultural Science. China also has one of the strictest
bio-safety regulations in the world, at least on paper, requiring
safety certificate and labelling for GM products. But with so much
GM soybean imported, it is a question of whether China is able to
keep a GM-free soybean zone.
Chang's institute conducted a test by growing GM soybean
alongside non-GM soybean in a field to monitor natural pollination.
They found that GM soybean could contaminate non-GM cultivated
soybeans and wild soybeans through pollination, said the
professor.
A 2004 Greenpeace report pointed out that "without effective
management, imported soybeans are very likely to enter the domestic
soybean cultivation system during transport, storage or processing.
Once this happens, contamination may be very hard, if not
impossible, to control."
To this Chang agreed. "Those farmers hired at soybean processing
factories can easily bring some imported soybean back home to
grow," he said.
"If such GM contamination occurs, that will certainly influence
our exportation (of non-GM soybean)," warned Zhu Xigang. That is
why he and some other experts strongly oppose any future plans to
cultivate GM soybean on Chinese soil.
Yet some Chinese biotechnologists have already started their
research on GM soybean, in some leading labs including Chang's
institute and one in Jilin Province of northeast China, according
to Chang, who added that all the current research is still in the
preliminary stage.
Another card to counter foreign monopoly, as some experts and
industry insiders have proposed, is to set up China's own soybean
industry association, as a Chinese equivalent to the American
Soybean Association, to join hands in the battle against foreign
monopoly, increase China's bargaining power in the international
negotiations, and raise the international competitiveness of
Chinese soybean industry. But the proposal is still in the air,
partly because of the opposition by those importers. "But such an
organization can really protect farmers and the industry at large,"
said Chang.
(China Daily January 24, 2006)