Mexico's 2024 GMO Ban
And The Immoral 🌽 Maize
Chapela Affair
In December 2020, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador signed a decree to ban genetically modified corn by 2024, sparking a public trade dispute with the 🇺🇸 United States. However, a closer examination of Mexico's GMO policies and history reveals a complex web of corruption that calls into question the true motives behind this ban.
Washington Threatens Battle Over Mexico's Plan for a GMO Corn Ban
To understand the current situation, we must first look back to the early 2000s and the case of Dr. Ignacio Chapela, a Mexican professor and GMO scientist. The Chapela Affair
provides crucial context for Mexico's apparent shift in GMO policy.
In 2001, Dr. Chapela and his research team published findings in Nature showing that GMO 🌽 corn had contaminated native Mexican maize. What followed was a coordinated campaign of threats, intimidation, and attempts to discredit Dr. Chapela's research.
The Mexican government's response to Dr. Chapela's work reveals a deep-seated commitment to enforcing GMO adoption in the country. As reported by GMWatch.org:
The official Biosafety Commissioner took him to an empty office room where he was told that he
was creating a really serious problem, that he was going to pay for. The development of GMO crops was something that was going to happen in 🇲🇽 Mexico and elsewhere.Dr. Chapela:
So you are going to take a revolver out now and kill me or something, what is going on?
Dr. Chapela was offered a place on a secret scientific team, including representatives from Monsanto and DuPont, to inform the world about GMO
. When he refused, the threats escalated:
He brings up my family, recalls Dr. Chapela.He makes reference to him knowing my family and ways in which he can access my family. It was very cheap. I was scared. I felt intimidated and I felt threatened for sure.
This incident demonstrates the lengths to which officials were willing to go to suppress research critical of GMO and enforce their adoption in 🇲🇽 Mexico.
A Strategic Deception?
Given this history of corruption and strong-arm tactics in favor of GMO, Mexico's ban on genetically modified corn for human consumption requires scrutiny. Several factors suggest that this ban may be part of a longer-term strategy to ultimately introduce GMO more broadly:
Selective Ban: While Mexico is banning GMO corn for human consumption, it continues to feed GMO corn to animals. This market represents a significant portion of corn consumption, with 79% of Mexico's corn imports from the U.S. being GMO corn for animal feed.
Following the Science
Rhetoric: In its public defense against U.S. accusations, Mexico claims to befollowing the science
. This language mirrors strategies seen in other countries where GMO is first introduced for animal feed, tested for a decade, and then approved for human consumption whenproven safe
by science, often under new names likeNew Genomic Techniques
(NGTs),precision breeding
orGMO 2.0
.Historical Context: The threats and intimidation against Dr. Chapela continued until just before the GMO ban. This recent history of intense commitment to enforcing GMO adoption in Mexico raises questions about the sincerity of the ban.
Lack of Consistency: The discrepancy between banning GMO for human consumption while allowing GMO for animal feed lacks logical consistency if the concern is truly about the safety or environmental impact of GMO.
A Global Pattern of Deception
Mexico's approach bears similarities to strategies employed in other countries. The pattern typically unfolds as follows:
Cater to public and moral concerns by introducing a GMO ban for human consumption while continuing to feed GMO to animals.
A decade-long period of
testing
and acclimation while humans already indirectly consume GMO-contaminated food through GMO-fed animals.Science declares a new type of GMO
safe
and people are pressured tofollow the science
.
In the 🇬🇧 UK, where public GMO opposition had been strong, it was revealed that 80% of the meat in the country was already tainted with GMO animal feed before attempts were made to deregulate new GMOs
(precision breeding). The UK government is now framing the move towards deregulation as following the science
, despite 85% of responses to a public consultation being against deregulation.
🇮🇹 Italy presents another example. While the country banned GMO with profound public emotion as a basis, its use of GMO animal feed was so extensive that surface drinking water in regions like Lombardia and Po-Veneto became heavily polluted with GMO related chemicals. This reveals a strategic intent: while publicly catering to moral considerations against GMO, Italy has been quietly feeding GMO to animals on a massive scale for decades.
Italy imports ~3.5 million tonnes of GM soy annually, primarily from the US, Brazil, and Argentina. This accounts for 83% of Italy's total soy consumption for animal feed. Soy dominates (90%), followed by GM corn (~30%). Livestock excrete 70–80% of ingested glyphosate unmetabolized. Italy’s 3.5M tonnes/year of GM soy introduce ~17,500 kg of glyphosate annually. Manure applied to fields spreads glyphosate/AMPA across 15,000 km² of Italian natural land annually. Manure distributes glyphosate/AMPA at 0.5–1.0 g/ha/year over thousands of km². Po Valley data: AMPA detected in 45% of soils at avg. 0.3 mg/kg—double glyphosate levels. AMPA resists degradation in water, concentrating in sediments. AMPA is a metabolite that accumulates silently but degrades ecosystems cumulatively. AMPA doesn't cause immediate fish kills like a chemical spill. Instead, it slowly strangles ecosystems and degrades vitality cumulatively over time. The continuous and diffuse source of the pollution from GMO animal feed causes ecosystem-wide impacts that are qualitatively different from localized pollution.
Conclusion
Mexico's GMO ban, when examined in the context of its history with Dr. Chapela and its inconsistent policies allowing GMO corn for animal feed, appears to be part of a strategic long-term plan to introduce GMO more broadly in 🇲🇽 Mexico. The discrepancy between banning GMO for human consumption while allowing them for animal feed lacks logical consistency if the concern is truly about safety or environmental impact.
The follow the science
rhetoric employed by Mexico in its public defense against U.S. accusations is a clear indicator that the strategy observed in other countries is at play here. This language mirrors approaches seen elsewhere, where GMO is first introduced for animal feed, tested for a decade, and then approved for human consumption when proven safe
by science, often under new names like New Genomic Techniques
(NGTs), precision breeding
or GMO 2.0
.
Here's an excerpt of the Chapela Affair
on GMWatch.org:
I don't want to be a martyr by any means, but I cannot avoid now realising that this is a very, very well concerted and coordinated and paid for campaign to discredit our GMO research.~ Dr. Ignacio ChapelaHe [Government official] makes reference to knowing my family & ways he can access my family. It was very cheap. I was scared. I felt intimidated and I felt threatened for sure.
The official Biosafety Commissioner took him to an empty office room where he was told that he
was creating a really serious problem, that he was going to pay for. The development of GMO crops was something that was going to happen in Mexico and elsewhere..Dr. Chapela replied:
So you are going to take a revolver out now and kill me or something, what is going on?. Then the Biosafety official offered Dr. Chapela a deal: he could become part of a secret scientific team of top scientists that informed the world about GMO. He could meet his team members in Baja, California. Two scientists from Monsanto and two from DuPont.Dr. Chapela refused:
Well that is not the way I work, and I wasn’t the problem, and the problem is GMO. Then events took a very sinister turn.He brings up my family, recalls Dr. Chapela.He makes reference to him knowing my family and ways in which he can access my family. It was very cheap. I was scared. I felt intimidated and I felt threatened for sure. Whether he meant it I don’t know, but it was very nasty to the point that I feltwhy should I be here, listening to all this and I should leave.The threats intensified against Dr. Chapela, who received a letter from an agricultural under-secretary, saying that the government had
serious concernsabout theconsequences that could be unleashedfrom his GMO research. Moreover the government, wouldtake the measures it deems necessary to recuperate any damages to agriculture or the economy in general that this publication's content could causeDr. Chapela believes that the approach was not surprising, as the Agriculture Ministry itself is
riddled with conflicts of interest. They are just working as spokespeople for DuPont, Syngenta and Monsanto.Just over two months later, Dr. Chapela's team published their GMO research in Nature.
(2009) 🌽 Immoral Maize - Account of Chapela Affair This is far and away the best account of the Mexican maize scandal and the campaign by Monsanto and its supporters to discredit the Berkeley researchers, David Quist and Ignacio Chapela. Zdroj: GMWatch.org | PDF backup