Innovation is key to America's breadbasket

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In addition, 93 percent of the U.S. soybean acreage is now planted with biotech varieties. Soybean yields have increased about 10 percent since 1996. And 94 percent of U.S. cotton is now genetically engineered. The result is that cotton yields have increased approximately 12 percent since 1996, the ERS reports.

This has been a particularly difficult year for American farmers, who confronted the worst drought since 1988. They experienced reduced yields, earlier harvests and reduced income. There is no total solution to drought, because the reality is that plants need water to survive and thrive. But to help alleviate the effects of drought on the U.S. food supply, seed companies have been working with farmers across America's farm belt to make available corn varieties that can improve a crop's ability to use water more efficiently and tolerate drought conditions.

Farmers who planted drought-tolerant corn varieties this year say their corn crop appeared to endure the drought better than other varieties. Even a small improvement in tolerating drought – just 4 to 8 percent – can have a huge economic impact when magnified across the broad scope of America’s corn crop. This is encouraging to agriculture scientists, because developing plant innovations that improve a crop’s ability to use water more efficiently is critical to addressing weather conditions in the face of our changing climate.

“Continued research and breeding, including the use of biotechnology, is essential in developing varieties that can survive and sustain economic yields despite seasonal droughts and higher temperatures we expect in the future,” says Dr. Kent Bradford, professor and director of the Seed Biotechnology Center at the University of California, Davis.

There is no single solution to helping farmers grow the food an expanding U.S. and global population needs today and in the future. But, as in other areas of our economy, science can offer improved seeds and soil inputs, or help farmers conserve the quality of their land and water resources. Innovation is essential to ensuring our farmers remain the world’s most productive, and in turn, keep America’s rural economy strong.

For more information on the benefits of agricultural biotechnology, visit www.whybiotech.com.

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