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SOURCE: World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development. World Bank, October 2007.

SOURCE: World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development. World Bank, October 2007. SOURCE: Gómez-Barbero, M., Berbel, J. and Rodríguez-Cerezo, E. 2008. Bt corn in Spain—the performance of the EU's first GM crop. Nature Biotechnology 26: 384-386.

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SOURCE: World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development. World Bank, October 2007.

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  1. SOURCE: World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development. World Bank, October 2007.

  2. SOURCE: Gómez-Barbero, M., Berbel, J. and Rodríguez-Cerezo, E. 2008. Bt corn in Spain—the performance of the EU's first GM crop. Nature Biotechnology 26: 384-386.

  3. In Lean Times, Biotech Grains Are Less Taboo April 21, 2008 "...tightening global supply has made it harder to get nonengineered corn...Millers and food companies are less able to pay the surcharge to keep nonengineered corn separate from biotech varieties.” Reality for the Korean Corn Processing Industry Association. SOURCE: “In Lean Times, Biotech Grains Are Less Taboo”, New York Times, April 19, 2008 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/21/business/21crop.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print

  4. The Contraction of Product Quality Innovation in Agricultural Biotechnology Surveys of actual and expected progress in ten categories of product quality innovations with transgenic plants. SOURCE: Graff, G.D., Zilberman, D. and Bennett, A.B. 2009. The contraction of agbiotech product quality innovation in agricultural biotechnology. Nature Biotechnology, in press (August, 2009).

  5. The Contraction of Product Quality Innovation in Agricultural Biotechnology Location and sector of the organizations responsible for the 558 transgenic product quality innovations identified in the primary survey. SOURCE: Graff, G.D., Zilberman, D. and Bennett, A.B. 2009. The contraction of agbiotech product quality innovation in agricultural biotechnology. Nature Biotechnology, in press (August, 2009).

  6. The Contraction of Product Quality Innovation in Agricultural Biotechnology Annual counts of product quality innovations in the R&D pipeline as identified in the primary survey. SOURCE: Graff, G.D., Zilberman, D. and Bennett, A.B. 2009. The contraction of agbiotech product quality innovation in agricultural biotechnology. Nature Biotechnology, in press (August, 2009).

  7. SOURCE: Capital Press, December 4, 2009

  8. “Another development in the R&D of GM crops is the emergence of more players. While currently it is private companies from the USA or Europe that develop most of the GM events and crops (which are generally first authorized and cultivated in North America), over the next years more GM crops will be supplied by private and public entities from Asia, in particular from China and India. ” SOURCE: Stein, A.J. and Rodríguez-Cerezo, E. 2009. The global pipeline of new GM crops: implications of asynchronous approval for international trade. JRC Scientific and Technical Report EUR Number: 23846 EN. http://ipts.jrc.ec.europa.eu/publications/pub.cfm?id=2420

  9. SOURCE: CSA News, May 2010, Vol. 55, page 27. Original source of chart is at http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd/presentations/aaasrd20100316.pdf

  10. Use of GM insect-resistant Bacillus thuringiensis toxin (Bt) cotton generated not only higher income for rural workers but also more employment…about 424 million additional days of employment for female earners SOURCE: Subramanian, A., Kirwan, K., Pink, D. and Qaim, M. 2010. GM crops and gender issue. Nature Biotechnology 28, Pages: 404–406.

  11. JOHANNESBURG (AFP) – South Africa produces too much maize. Its neighbours not enough. But rather than feeding its neighbours, South Africa's surplus maize may feed Chinese chickens, due to regional worries about genetically modified crops. SOURCE: http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100920/sc_afp/safricachinatradefarmfoodenvironment

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