Monsanto Revives Wheat-Seed Development, Touts Technology
July 14 2009 - 12:26PM
Dow Jones News
Monsanto Co. (MON) has revived plans to develop higher-yielding
wheat seeds, five years after dropping the crop amid concerns that
genetically modified varieties could hit U.S. exports.
The world's largest seed producer by revenue said Tuesday that
it had acquired a U.S. wheat-seed developer as part of a long-term
program to develop more drought-resistant strains.
The company will not try to develop GM wheat seeds resistant to
its Roundup herbicide, a plan it dropped in 2004, though it will
"explore herbicide-tolerant and disease-resistant biotech
traits."
Hugh Grant, Monsanto's chairman and CEO, has in the past
described wheat as "the poor cousin" in terms of research and
development.
Investment, which can take $100 million and up to 10 years for a
new crop variety, has paled next to the corn, soy, cotton and
fresh-produce markets as rising demand from the developing world
put pressure on farmers to boost yield.
Wheat consumption is more focused than corn and soy on human
rather than animal consumption. Wider resistance to GM crops -
notably in Europe - has in the past crimped interest from seed
developers and farmers.
"The U.S. wheat industry has come together to call for new
technology investment, and we believe we have game-changing
technologies - like our drought-tolerance and improved-yield traits
- that can meaningfully address major challenges wheat growers face
every season," Monsanto executive vice president of global strategy
and operations Carl Casale said in a statement.
Monsanto said it paid $45 million for assets of WestBred LLC,
which specializes in wheat germplasm, the crop's seed genetic
material.
Dow Chemical Co. (DOW) last month expanded its research into
wheat seeds and traits for the first time, partnering with a
plant-breeding company called World Wide Wheat.
Monsanto shelved efforts for a Roundup Ready wheat variety in
2004, citing a longer-than-expected timeframe to achieving
commercial production and declining spring wheat acreage. The
company had begun technical development of the variety in 1997.
Monsanto shares recently were up nine cents at $73.64.
-By Doug Cameron, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4135;
doug.cameron@dowjones.com
(Tom Polansek and Kerry E. Grace contributed to this
article)