The Xa21 is the front runner for introduction in China

As early as this year, China could start commercial production of a new breed of genetically engineered rice.

If adopted, it would be the world’s first large-scale plantation of a major transgenic food crop and, some scientists say, would provide an environmentally friendly answer to the food problems of the world’s poor, says a Reuters report.
But those who fear that genetically modified organisms (GMOs) present a danger to the natural crop balance say Beijing’s haste to develop the rice has more to do with a drive to bring the income levels of its farmers in line with others who have prospered more from China’s red-hot economic development.
Scientists in China, the world’s top rice producer and consumer, say Beijing is looking to mass produce Xa21 rice, which contains a gene from an African wild rice.
Government officials have remained tight-lipped about plans to introduce any form of GMO rice.
The Xa21 strain, which was developed through publicly funded international research, is resistant to bacterial blight — one of the most serious crop diseases in Africa and Asia, which can cause devastating yield loss as it spreads in water droplets.
As it derives from a wild rice gene, it has emerged as front-runner in the race to be the first GMO rice crop, ahead of insect-resistant BT rice, which contains a toxic bacterial gene.
The scientists say Beijing hopes Xa21 will help convince sceptics of the safety of genetically modified organisms, while moving China a step forward in its quest to become a global leader in biotechnology.
“Many scientists in China think the Xa21 rice is relatively safe for the environment and health, as its gene comes from a wild rice,” Dayuan Xue, professor at Nanjing Institute of Environmental Sciences, told Reuters.
Should China approve commercial production of the rice, it would be the first time that the country had approved a large GMO project since 1999, when a global consumer outcry over the safety of genetically modified foods persuaded the government to stop.
It would also be in stark contrast to Monsanto Co.’s decision last year to halt plans to introduce the world’s first GMO wheat in Canada and the United States.
At present, herbicide-tolerant or insect-resistant soy, cotton, corn and rapeseed account for most of the GMOs grown commercially worldwide. Of the four, China has allowed only GMO cotton.