Beijing biotech firm banks on GM corn in race to be China's Monsanto
Send a link to a friend
[December 06, 2021] By
Dominique Patton
BEIJING (Reuters) - As China prepares to
open its $120 billion corn market to genetically modified (GM) seed,
little-known Dabeinong Biotechnology hopes to reap the benefits of early
biotech investments and a law keeping foreign firms on the sidelines.
The long-anticipated commercialization of GM corn in the world's No. 2
producer is set to significantly boost yields, reducing the need for
imports. It may also spur hoped-for reform of a chaotic and oversupplied
seed sector, industry experts say, creating a new multibillion dollar
market that may eventually open up to global seed giants.
New regulations drafted last month lay out for the first time the steps
needed in China for approval of corn varieties that integrate GM traits,
paving the way for the market to open as early as next year.
Beijing has made clear it will champion home-grown leaders in seed
technology, and Dabeinong is the larger of two local companies with an
insect-resistant and herbicide-tolerant corn already approved as safe by
the agriculture ministry.
"For the first two years, because we're the first mover in the market,
and we believe our technology is better, we'll have two thirds of the
share," general manager Liu Shi told Reuters.
By the third year, even with more competition, it could generate around
1 billion yuan ($155 million) in royalties, he estimated. The company
will rely on seed breeders using its traits to generate revenues.
ME-TOO PRODUCTS
Dabeinong Biotechnology was founded in 2011 as a unit of large animal
feed producer, Beijing Dabeinong Technology Group Co. Ltd.
The parent firm made headlines in the United States after a senior
executive was among several people charged with stealing corn seed from
fields in Iowa and Illinois. The executive, the brother-in-law of group
founder Shao Genhuo, was jailed for three years in 2016.
Dabeinong strictly abides by the law and is trying to rebuild its image,
said Liu, who joined the company earlier this year. He previously worked
at Monsanto, now part of Germany's Bayer, in the 1990s when the GM
pioneer was trying to get its first products accepted.
Dabeinong, with a staff of 160, hopes to emulate the success of the U.S.
seed giant, but above all wants to help farmers, Liu said.
For now, Dabeinong's corn traits use genes that were discovered and
commercialised by other firms but are off-patent. The biotech firm is
working on its own genes, although these are yet to be approved.
It may need to move quickly before its "me-too" products lose their
value, said an executive at a multinational seed company who declined to
be named.
To ensure its first-mover advantage, Dabeinong is hiring more commercial
staff and in September invited seed companies to visit trial plots in
Inner Mongolia and Henan province planted with corn containing its
Fengmai brand traits.
[to top of second column] |
A farmer harvests corn in a field on the outskirts of Jiayuguan,
Gansu province, China September 28, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia
Rawlins
It has licensing deals with almost 200 seed firms.
COMPETITION COMING
Early demand is likely to be strong.
China harvested 261 million tonnes of corn in 2020/21 from some 41 million
hectares, largely to feed its huge herds of pigs and chickens. Each hectare,
however, yielded only about 60% as much corn on average as in No. 1 producer,
the United States.
Graphic: Average corn yields over the last five years in the world's top
producers -
https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-GMO/DABEINONG/zdpxonlgrvx/
chart.png
About 70% of corn seed sold in China's northeast breadbasket is already
illegally bred GM seed, said an October article in the state-backed China Seed
Industry journal, highlighting its popularity with farmers.
But Dabeinong won't be alone for long.
Though global seed giants like U.S.-based Corteva Inc and Bayer cannot enter
China's GM market, Syngenta, the world's No. 3 seed producer owned by China's
Sinochem Holdings, expects to become market leader, according to the prospectus
for its upcoming IPO.
Syngenta is a major player in GM grains, but as it was only bought in 2017 is
still playing catchup in China in the drawn-out process to win biosafety
certificates for its GM traits from regulators.
Hangzhou Ruifeng Biotechnology, a tiny firm founded by university professor Shen
Zhicheng, has an insect-resistant, herbicide-tolerant trait approved as safe by
Beijing. The company also uses some new genes.
Yuan Longping High-tech Agriculture Co Ltd, backed by state-owned conglomerate
CITIC, is also developing GM traits.
Meanwhile, the exact timing of GM corn is still uncertain.
Under the new rules, seed varieties that integrate GM traits must undergo a
one-year production trial, and it is not clear if Beijing will accept data
already gathered by Dabeinong.
"We have two plans, a more aggressive one for commercial seed production in
2022, and another for 2023," said Liu. "We're waiting for the government's
message."
($1 = 6.3733 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Dominique Patton; editing by Richard Pullin)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |