A small but
growing number of scientist-entrepreneurs are boarding the synbio train
and forming companies with public funding and risk capital, like LS9,
Amyris, and Codon Devices. They claim that synthetic biology can be
used to create artificial organisms that will do everything, from
eradicating malaria to producing fuel.
"Amyris Biotechnologies is translating the promise of synthetic
biology into solutions for real-world problems. Building on advances in
molecular, cell, and systems biology, we are engineering microbes
capable of producing high-value compounds to address major global
health and energy challenges. We are employing these living chemical
factories to produce novel pharmaceuticals, renewable fuels, and
specialty chemicals," says Amyris Biotechnologies Corporation in its
website.
The most
prominent and outspoken of these new techno capitalists is the polemic
J. Craig Venter, who became famous by sequencing the human genome with
his company Celera Genomics. In 2007 Time magazine included him in their list of the world`s 100 most influential people.
In 2005 Venter founded the Synthetic Genomics Company, which aims to
create synthetic microbes that will produce fuels like ethanol and
hydrogen. Half of its startup capital came from Mexican billionaire
Alfonso Romo. Venter`s nonprofit Institute for Biological Energy
Alternatives receives funding from the U.S. Department of Energy`s
Genomes to Life program, which develops the use of plants and microbes
for varied tasks, such as generating energy and removing carbon from
the atmosphere.
"The increasing use of fossil fuels is contributing to the
environmental challenges of global climate change; air, water, and land
pollution; and loss of biological diversity," says the Synthetic
Genomics website. "We are developing novel genomic-driven strategies to
address global energy and environmental challenges. Recent advances in
the field of synthetic genomics present seemingly limitless
applications that could revolutionize production of energy, chemicals,
and pharmaceuticals and enable carbon sequestration and environmental
remediation ... we are uniquely positioned to ignite a biological
industrial revolution, and we are committed to unlocking the keys to a
clean energy future through genomics."
Venter is already well-known to Latin American civil society groups,
which have accused him of bio-piracy. In 2004 he sailed to the
Bermudas, México, Costa Rica, Panama, Chile, and the biodiversity-rich
Galapagos islands of Ecuador in his 90-foot Sorcerer II floating
laboratory, collecting microbes to study. Participants in the Social
Forum of the Americas, celebrated that year in Ecuador, denounced the
expedition as an attempt to patent and privatize biodiversity.
"Venter`s expedition in search of microbes calls attention to
serious unresolved issues regarding the sovereignty over genetic
resources and their privatization through patenting," said Silvia
Ribeiro of the ETC Group. "Venter`s pretension is one of the major
threats of privatization and commodification of life, which is why we
oppose his presence here and in the rest of the region`s countries,"
declared LucÃÂa Gallardo of Acción Ecológica, an environmental group
based in Ecuador.
The idea of novel synthetic organisms raises warning flags to
critics of biotechnology. The ETC Group is concerned that synthetic
biology is moving full speed ahead with practically zero societal
debate or regulatory oversight. "Ultimately synthetic biology means
cheaper and widely accessible tools to build bioweapons, virulent
pathogens, and artificial organisms that could pose grave threats to
people and the planet. The danger is not just bio-terror, but
`bio-error.`"
In May 2006 an international coalition of 35 organizations,
including scientists, environmentalists, trade unionists, bio-warfare
experts, and social justice advocates called for public debate,
regulation, and oversight of synthetic biology. The signatories
explicitly rejected proposals for "self-regulation."
"Scientists
creating new life forms cannot be allowed to act as judge and jury,"
stated Sue Mayer, director of GeneWatch UK. "The possible social,
environmental, and bio-weapons implications are all too serious to be
left to well-meaning but self-interested scientists. Proper public
debate, regulation, and policing is needed."
A radically different paradigm
In order to address the energy crisis and global warming we do not
need high tech solutions, say agrofuel critics. They maintain that what
is needed instead is to confront the economic system and provide
ecological alternatives based on locally-based development.
"There is simply no escape: we have to reduce energy consumption if
we are to survive on this planet," states GRAIN. "There is no point
asking the car companies to make their cars a bit more energy-efficient
if the number of cars is going to double and if public policies
continue to be geared toward making this happen. There is no point
asking people to turn off their lights if the entire economic system
continues to be oriented solely toward moving goods around the globe
from countries where the corporations producing them can obtain the
highest profit margins." They continue, "To address climate change, we
don`t need agrofuel plantations to produce fuel energy. Instead, we
need to turn the industrial food system upside down. We need policies
and strategies to reduce the consumption of energy and to prevent
waste. Such policies and strategies already exist and are being fought
for."
La VÃÂa
Campesina, which represents tens of millions of peasants and small
farmers in 56 countries, proposes small-scale production, which does
not require industrial farm machinery that uses energy and burns fossil
fuel; organic farming, which does not use fossil fuel-based toxic
agrochemicals; and truly sustainable energy alternatives, like solar.
According to the organization, it is necessary to radically change
the ways in which we produce, commercialize, and consume food, under
the conception that small scale sustainable agriculture and consumption
of local foods can revert environmental devastation and provide
sustenance for millions of rural and urban families that currently have
no access to food in sufficient quantity and quality.
"Sustainable small-scale farming and local food consumption will
reverse the actual devastation and support millions of farming
families," declared VÃÂa Campesina at the UN conference on climate
change in Bali in December 2007. "Agriculture can also contribute to
cool down the earth by using farm practices that store CO2 and reduce
considerably the use of energy on farms."
According to Altieri and Holt-Giménez, "The only way to stop global
warming is to promote small-scale organic agriculture and decrease the
use of all fuels, which requires major reductions in consumption
patterns and development of massive public transportation systems,
areas that the University of California should be actively researching
and that BP and the other biofuel partners will never invest one penny
toward."
GRAIN concurs:
"In agriculture and food production, they mean orienting production
toward local rather than international markets; they mean adopting
strategies to keep people on the land, rather than throwing them off;
they mean supporting sustained and sustainable approaches for bringing
biodiversity back into agriculture; they mean diversifying agricultural
production systems, using and expanding on local knowledge; and they
mean putting local communities back in the driving seat of rural
development."
They continue, "Such policies and strategies imply the use and
further development of agro-ecological technologies to maintain and
improve soil fertility and organic matter and in the process to
sequester carbon dioxide in the soil rather than expelling it into the
atmosphere. And they also require a head-on confrontation with the
global agro-industrial complex, now stronger than ever, that is driving
with its agrofuel agenda in exactly the opposite direction."
Copyright © 2008 by the Americas Program.