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Monsanto: Full of Hot Air on rBGH

by Darcy White last modified 2008-07-09 12:06

A recent study - which was conveniently conducted by two researchers with major ties to Monsanto - claims that recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH) is good for the environment. Nice try, Monsanto.

Dairy CowsCows produce significant quantities of greenhouse gases.  Greenhouse gases are bad.  Therefore, anything that might reduce the number of cows is good, right?  This is the line of argument that proponents of recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH, also referred to as rBST) have taken in an effort to garner support for the artificial hormone.  The claim that rBGH will benefit the environment is based on a new study that allegedly shows that the use of the artificial hormone will allow fewer dairy cows to produce the same quantity of milk.  However, a little digging will reveal a number of problems with this study, and hence, with this claim.

But first I’d like to remind you about Monsanto, the enormous agricultural corporation that developed rBGH and markets it as the drug Prosilac.  The company clearly has a large stake in any publicity regarding the artificial hormone, so the fact that two of the researchers who conducted the study have significant ties to Monsanto is suspicious, to say the least.  One of the researchers, Roger Cady, is the company’s technical project manager for rBGH, and the main researcher, Dale Bauman, has served the company as a paid consultant since the 1980s. 

Additionally, the trustworthiness of the results is questionable given that previous investigations into the environmental impact of rBGH have not reached the same conclusion.  The Food and Drug Administration, the National Academy of Sciences, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have concluded that any change in greenhouse gas emissions is negligible and the use of the artificial hormone might even result in more emissions.  Dale Bauman argues that his study is more accurate, but given his and Roger Cady’s ties to Monsanto, I find myself siding with the government organizations on this one.

Yes, it is important to lower emissions, but we do not need rBGH in order to do this, as there are several other effective approaches that the industry should focus on.  Already, changes in nutrition and breeding have resulted in a substantial decrease, and scientists from the University of Melbourne claim that altering the composition of the feed could further reduce emissions by half.  The diary farms that use rBGH most are large and industrial – the same farms that produce most of the pollution in the first place.  If these farms truly want to reduce their environmental impact, they need to focus first on changing their basic practices to be more sustainable.  So the question is this: Do we ignore the bias in this new study and use rBGH to lower emissions, or do we put our energy into the alternative, less controversial approaches?  Considering the health risks associated with rBGH, I think the answer is pretty clear; we should be opposing rBGH, not celebrating it.

- Darcy White

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Monsanto's rBGH

Posted by D. J Handel at 2008-07-12 06:00
The studies, it seems, aren't including the fact that the hormones are affecting people, very young girls are having periods, too earely and other symtoms that at first, doctors couldn't pin down, until the child was taken off the milk with the hormone in it. How it affects young men is yet to be seen. Why have added hormones when just a good feeding program, organic would be best, might really be the best answer.

hormones effecting puberty

Posted by Bill at 2008-07-16 17:47
In the UK where cows are not supplimented with Posilac youngs girls are reaching puberty at a younger age just as they are in the. Could it be younger girls diets that are causing earlier puberty.Its so easy to point fingers at something or someone else for problems of our own doings.

Health Effects of rBGH

Posted by Sarah Alexander, Food & Water Watch at 2008-07-17 10:11
You both raise good concerns about the effects of rBGH on our health. Just as in the article up above, most of the studies that have been done on rBGH have been done by Monsanto. The drug has only been tested as an animal drug, and little has been done to study the effects on human health. That being said, while there haven't been conclusive studies that link the artificial hormones to early puberty, there are several links to other health problems.

The artificial hormones given to the cows cause an increase in the hormone IGF-1. This hormone is passed through in the milk, and in humans has been linked to breast, prostate, and colon cancers, as well as Type II diabetes. Additionally the artificial hormones have been banned in all 27 countries of the European Union, Japan, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand.

The best way to avoid these potential health problems is to check the label, and make sure you're purchasing rBGH-Free milk and dairy products.

"Monsanto: Full of Hot Air"

Posted by Prof Dale E Bauman at 2008-11-26 14:46
The article by D. White titled “Monsanto: Full of Hot Air on rBGH” relates to our scientific publication published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (http://www.pnas.org/content/105/28/9668.full.pdf+html). The claim that our premise and conclusion differs from previous work is false. The environmental benefits of rbST use have been documented in previous scientific studies referenced in our manuscript. Likewise, the National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences, Environmental Protection Agency, Council for Agricultural Science and Technology, US Congress Office of Technology Assessment, and the Executive Branch of the Federal Government have all published reports that conclude the use of rbST mitigates the environmental impact of dairy production. The originality and scientific basis of our research is three-fold. Firstly, all data and calculations are referenced to peer-reviewed scientific or governmental publications. Secondly, our model uses the NRC Nutrient Requirements of Dairy Cattle (the nutritional gold standard for the dairy industry), as the platform to calculate dairy herd nutrient utilization and waste outputs. Finally, our model uses a life cycle assessment approach to quantify the environmental impact of rbST use.

Various methods can be used to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and the carbon footprint from dairy production, but the biggest impact may be achieved by using fewer cows to produce the same amount of milk, i.e. improving productive efficiency (milk output per resource input). The dilution of maintenance effect conferred by rbST (and discussed in the paper) reduces the number of animals required for milk production. Fewer animals means less feed, less cropland and less waste outputs by diluting the maintenance requirement of the cow population. While it is true that any technology or management practice that improves productive efficiency will also mitigate environmental impact, these effects are additive and rbST is the only technology that has the potential to singly reduce environmental impact by 9%.

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