Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Supply Chain Risk

Lab-grown breast-milk, drought proof crops… five eureka moments | The Sunday Times Magazine

A new type of wheat engineered to withstand climate change is being commercially grown for the first time, as harvests in some areas decline because of environmental changes. Wheat yields have fallen in recent years in Argentina because of lower rainfall, but farmers in the country —one of the world’s top-ten wheat exporters — can now sow a variety that has been genetically modified to be drought-resistant. The move is likely to be controversial because of objections to genetically engineered crops, but some scientists see it as crucial to avoiding food shortages.

“Approval of our wheat represents a milestone,” says Federico Trucco, the chief executive of Bioceres, the company that developed the drought-resistant crop. “Now we must go out and convince people that this is

Related posts

Moderna climbs 12% after saying its coronavirus vaccine likely protects against new strains found in the UK and South Africa

scceu

River cleanup follows Qld, NSW floods

scceu

5 nagging questions the Duterte gov’t has not answered on its use of unregistered vaccines

scceu