The Delaware Gazette

Corporations boost agricultural research funding

ALAN SCHER ZAGIER

Asso­ci­ated Press

COLUMBIA, Mo. — The gap between fed­eral sup­port for agri­cul­tural research at large pub­lic uni­ver­si­ties and pri­vate invest­ment con­tin­ues to grow — and the divide comes with increased threats to aca­d­e­mic free­dom and more instances of med­dling in the lab, a new research report suggests.

A recent study by Food and Water Watch, a Washington-based envi­ron­men­tal group, shows that nearly one-quarter of the money spent on agri­cul­tural research at land-grant uni­ver­si­ties comes from cor­po­ra­tions, trade asso­ci­a­tions and foun­da­tions, an all-time high. Finan­cial sup­port from the U.S. Depart­ment of Agri­cul­ture accounts for less than 15 per­cent, the low­est level in nearly two decades.

The con­sumer advo­cacy group’s report is rife with what it calls exam­ples of how cor­po­rate money “cor­rupts” the pub­lic research mis­sion at land-grant schools, which were cre­ated by the Mor­rill Act of 1862. The law pro­vided fed­eral land for states to estab­lish agri­cul­ture and engi­neer­ing colleges.

The exam­ples range from a Uni­ver­sity of Geor­gia food safety pro­gram that allows indus­try groups to join an advi­sory board in exchange for annual $20,000 dona­tions, to an Ohio State Uni­ver­sity pro­fes­sor whose research on genet­i­cally mod­i­fied sun­flow­ers was blocked by two seed com­pa­nies after the ini­tial results sug­gested the biotech sun­flow­ers fos­tered the growth of weeds.

The report, enti­tled “Pub­lic Research, Pri­vate Gain,” also explores the blurry lines cre­ated when uni­ver­si­ties and indus­try work hand-in-hand, such as when South Dakota State Uni­ver­sity sued farm­ers over wheat seed patents as part of a public-private coali­tion formed with a Mon­santo Co. sub­sidiary. The Missouri-based com­pany is known for aggres­sive lit­i­ga­tion against what it calls seed piracy. Kansas State Uni­ver­sity, Col­orado State and Texas A&M have pur­sued sim­i­lar lawsuits.

Such alliances are a far cry from land-grant uni­ver­si­ties’ his­toric role in pro­mot­ing pub­lic knowl­edge and freely shar­ing the fruits of their research, said Patty Lovera, Food and Water Watch’s assis­tant direc­tor. The report notes that pub­licly funded uni­ver­sity research led to the domes­ti­ca­tion of blue­ber­ries, early vari­eties of high-yield hybrid corn and com­mon tools to fight soil erosion.

“There’s a real sense in agri­cul­ture of what these schools used to be,” Lovera said. “There was much more trust in what they put out. This is not the same research sys­tem of decades ago, and we’re act­ing like it is.”

Deans at sev­eral agri­cul­tural schools sin­gled out for crit­i­cism in the report main­tained that while cor­po­rate sup­port is vital, it’s unlikely to sway research results or even influ­ence what research gets done.

“We’re kind of caught between a rock and a hard place,” said Thomas Payne, dean of the Col­lege of Agri­cul­ture, Food and Nat­ural Resources at the Uni­ver­sity of Mis­souri. “In order for research to con­tinue, we have to have sup­port from a vari­ety of sources.”

Payne said indus­try sup­port accounts for just 5 per­cent of the agri­cul­tural research bud­get at Mis­souri — though the Food and Water Watch report notes that the per­cent­ages were sig­nif­i­cantly higher in the university’s plant sci­ences depart­ment (42 per­cent from 2007 to 2010) and its Col­lege of Vet­eri­nary Med­i­cine (63 per­cent from 2004 to 2010).

Mon­santo plays a promi­nent role on the Mis­souri cam­pus, where sci­ence stu­dents attend lec­tures in Mon­santo Audi­to­rium — built in part with a $950,000 grant from the St. Louis com­pany — and pro­fes­sors spin their uni­ver­sity research off into pri­vate com­pa­nies at the Mon­santo Place “life sci­ences busi­ness incu­ba­tor,” which was built with the help of a $2 mil­lion cor­po­rate grant.

The com­pany and oth­ers in food and agri­cul­ture pro­duc­tion have given sub­stan­tial sums to other uni­ver­si­ties as well. There’s a $1 mil­lion Mon­santo Stu­dent Ser­vices Wing at Iowa State University’s Col­lege of Agri­cul­ture and Life Sci­ences, and a $250,000 endowed Mon­santo chair in agri­cul­tural com­mu­ni­ca­tions at the Uni­ver­sity of Illinois.

Cargill Inc. donated $10 mil­lion more than a decade ago for nam­ing rights on a plant genomics build­ing at the Uni­ver­sity of Min­nesota, while two sen­sory labs at Pur­due carry the impri­maturs of the Kroger Co. and ConA­gra Foods Inc.

While the Food and Water Watch report sug­gests spend­ing mil­lions of dol­lars on build­ing nam­ing rights may also buy access to key deci­sion mak­ers, the donors and uni­ver­sity offi­cials say that’s not true.

“In our expe­ri­ence, there is no cor­re­la­tion between nam­ing rights and uni­ver­sity research,” Mon­santo spokes­woman Sara Miller said.

Another Mon­santo spokes­woman, Kelli Pow­ers, said the com­pany “is proud of its con­tri­bu­tions to land-grant uni­ver­si­ties and sup­port of uni­ver­sity agri­cul­tural research,” whether through nam­ing rights or stu­dent scholarships.

Michael Doyle, a pro­fes­sor of food micro­bi­ol­ogy at Geor­gia and direc­tor of its Cen­ter for Food Safety, rejected the notion that com­pa­nies such as Cargill, ConA­gra and the Coca-Cola Co. unduly influ­ence the center’s research agenda when they buy seats on the Board of Advisors.

“Indus­try does not tell me how to spend that money,” he said, not­ing that cor­po­rate sup­port accounts for just 10 per­cent of the program’s research bud­get. “But I ask the indus­try, ‘What are the areas you are inter­ested in?’”

Those inter­ests range from pathogen con­trol to insider access to sci­en­tists and reg­u­la­tors from the Atlanta-based Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol. Cor­po­rate part­ners are promised “spe­cial con­sid­er­a­tion” by Cen­ter for Food Safety fac­ulty mem­bers, and the center’s web­site reas­sures indus­try mem­bers that a pry­ing press isn’t allowed to attend those discussions.

“What we’re try­ing to do is come up with prac­ti­cal ways the indus­try can make our food safer,” Doyle added. “It’s not spe­cific to a com­pany … Some­times the research doesn’t work out the way the indus­try wants. We don’t hold back.”

With the cur­rent five-year farm bill set to expire at the end of Sep­tem­ber, Food and Water Watch wants Con­gress to boost the fed­eral invest­ment in cam­pus agri­cul­tural research, with more resources steered toward sus­tain­able meth­ods, organic farm­ing and reduced use of pes­ti­cides. The group also is call­ing for land-grant uni­ver­si­ties to more fully dis­close gifts by pri­vate donors and wants agri­cul­tural research jour­nals to adopt more strin­gent conflict-of-interest rules, sim­i­lar to the recent crack­down by med­ical journals.

“This is a con­ver­sa­tion that needs to be had about how we sup­port this research,” Lovera said. “There are a lot of con­se­quences of land grant-funding of indus­try research that haven’t been examined.”

AP News Posted by on Jun 8 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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