Segnosaur
Penultimate Amazing
So? The point is, the people are still kept alive....GMO crops will not prevent starvation, but will make it worse in the long term. Because it will artificially keep people alive that the current African farming systems can't support.
Where exactly is your proof that such a collapse will happen in such a short amount of time?When it collapses, and it will, hundreds of millions of people will die in maybe two or three years.
GMO foods are not a panacea; eventually the returns of some strains might diminish. But it will probably take decades for those problems to happen. (And you're assuming that the scientists producing genetically modified strains won't come up with new variants as the old ones become less effective.)
Still, a farmer is better off using GMO varieties with good farming practices, rather than just using those other practices by themselves.
Some genetic modifications might actually help preserve the soil.It's a huge problem in Africa. The degraded soil is a ticking time bomb that will starve out Africa's population.
For example, round-up ready crops could in theory reduce the need for tilling the soil (which can lead to erosion). Work on nitrogen-fixing crops could help soil composition.
Here's a question... if its so obvious that Africa's food problems can be solved "in more practical ways", then why haven't they? Do you think that you're the only person in the world to have figured that out?I'm just saying there are more practical ways of solving the issue other than GMO crops.
Or could it be that the problems in Africa (political, social and environmental) are so significant that they can't be solved as easily as you seem to think?