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Economics of AgBiotechnology Presentation to NDSU Extension Meeting Sept 21, 2005 . By William W. Wilson. GREENLAND. UNITED STATES (Alaska). CANADA. UNITED STATES. MEXICO. Topics. Overview and Motivation Major economic issues Cost reductions Consumer acceptance
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Economics of AgBiotechnology Presentation to NDSU Extension Meeting Sept 21, 2005 By William W. Wilson GREENLAND UNITED STATES (Alaska) CANADA UNITED STATES MEXICO
Topics • Overview and Motivation • Major economic issues • Cost reductions • Consumer acceptance • Segregation, IP and traceability • Distribution of benefits and costs • Challenges to agbiotechnology in future .
Studies on GM Wheat • Issues in Development and Adoption of GM Wheats, AgBioForum 6(3) 1-12; • Costs and Risks of Testing and Segregating GM Wheat, Rev of Ag. Econ • Adoption Strategics for GM Hard Wheats, • Contracting Strategies for GM Hard Wheats • Costs and Risks of Testing and Segregating GM Hard Wheats in Canada • Welfare Distribution of Introducing RRW in US and Canada • Costs and Risks of Conforming to EU Traceability Requirements in NA Hard Wheats, • Games and Strategies in Introducing GM Hard Wheats in NA • Technology Price Impacts of GM Technology in Hard Wheat (RRW and FRW) • Licensing and Stacking Games and Strategies in GM Hard Wheats
Flows of A Biotech Research and Development Benefits and Costs Over Time Gross Annual Benefits ($ per year) Research Benefits 5 10 15 20 25 30 Research Costs Annual Costs (-$ per year) Research and development lag Adoption Process Source: Alston et al. 2000.
Commercial View of Trait Development • Time for Development: 8-10 years • Cost: $80-100 million (incl. 20-40$ million in costs to conform to regulatory system) • Risks • Technical feasilility--proof of concept • Regulatory Approval--US and ROW • Commercial acceptance--price discounts • US and ROW • Consumers vs. buyers • Competitor traits and technologies • Patent protection--for a period
Ag Biotech Product Development (90%) • Regulatory submission • Seed bulk-up (75%) • Trait integration • Field testing • Agronomic evaluation • Regulatory data generation (50%) • Trait development • Bio-evaluation • Field trials • Pre-regulatory data • Large scale transformation (Probability of Success) (25%) (5%) • Gene optimization • Crop transformation • Bio-evaluation • Greenhouse and field trials • High throughput screening • Model crop testing Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Phase III Advanced development Phase IV Regulatory submission Phase I Proof of concept Discovery Gene/trait identification Phase II Early development
Number of field test permits filed by private agbiotech firms, 1987-2004
Number of field test permits filed by public institutions, 1987-2004
Applications for Field Trials in North Dakota, by Crop, 1990-2004
Future New Traits (prospective) • GM row crops: soybeans, canola and corn • Input traits: • Further refined input traits • Output traits refined by feeding efficiency and ethanol • Output traits: • Oil content, etc. • Food use of oils • BioDiesel (potential) • Wheat • Fusarium Resistance (Syngenta) • Drought Resistance (various state universities) • RR…door open to be revisited • Product quality: various forms • Other small grains—negligible • Bio-Pharmaceuticals
Myths about AgBiotechnology • Productivity gains/cost savings--typically understated! • Consumer acceptance • selected claims • GMA; other crops; and survey realities • segments in each market will persist • Segregation technology and costs
Economic Issue 1: Reduced cost of production and/or output trait • Some agbiotech traits can • Reduce the cost of production due to the technology • Reduce the cost of competing inputs • Reduce the cost of producing an output trait
Sources of Cost Savings for RRW: Implied in Model Assumptions $/ac Value of Yield (11-16%) 13.62 $/ac Adopter Cost Savings 9.70 Tech fee -6.00 Dockage rem. costs 0.33 Total 18 $/ac 48 c/b 18 $/mt
Potential Decreases in Crop Technology Costs • Prices for competing chemicals: Soybeans post intro of RR • reduced 40-50% • glyphosate reduced 22% by 1998. • Proposed ND GM traits (Wilson and Huso--NDSU) • Prices of competing products to RR: decrease 35% • Prices of competing products to Fus Res: decrease 37%
Prospective Adoption Rates for GM Wheats in ND • Allowing RRW, GM FRW, Stacked, and Conventional varieties: • Equilibrium adoption in US HRS areas: • GM FRW 34% • RRW 20% • Stacked 31% • Conventional 15%
Economic Issue 2: Consumer Acceptance • Who benefits: • Producer benefits--cost reduction and/or increased yield • Consumer benefits of producer traits • increased supply, reduced price, and/or new trait • Consumer benefits of output traits
What Do End-Users Want? • Difficulties in Defining Desired Characteristics • Who is the buyer? Consumers, bakers, millers.... • Divergent interests (i.e., multitudes of products) leading to fundamentally different market segments (i.e. of desired characteristics) • Seeking information about characteristics that may not be currently available (e.g., storability, nutritional attributes)
Buyer acceptance--discussion • Claims of buyer aversion should be challenged • US Domestic market is by far the dominant market: • 70% of grocery products are GM; and • bread has GM ingredients already • Buyers are naturally averse prior to trait gaining regulatory approval • Buyers are not likley fully informed about the functional differences • Buyers typically express aversion in surveys; • in practice accept the products (results of major survey of literature). Be cautious of surveys! • Experimental Auction results: • Suggest 7% of market is averse to products containing GM
Buyers Approach is Evolving • Many countries do not have regulatory process with scientific integrety • Some will naturally adopt that of US, and, require certification (Philipines, China, Mexico)--Certificate of Free Trade • Application in the case of GM wheat—see below
Consumer Acceptance: Summary • Evolving • e.g., China • Segments: • In nearly all mature markets, one should expect market segments to emerge with respect to GM acceptance • Due to demand, incomes, market maturity, regulations, etc. • Natural process of market maturity • Segregation: • Buyers in most cases have found, or are finding ways to make purchases of non-GM even though GM may be the predominant crop • Numerous examples in US on corn and soybeans • Brazil routinely serves both market segments • etc
Spectrum of Procurement Strategies Spot Market Vertical Integration • Identity • Preservation • Traceability • Proc. certif. Contract Production Testing & Segregation Targeting grades protein F.N. T.W. Prod. Practices Origins Varieties Assets Grain By Location Pre- Shipping Pre- Processing Prod. Practices Quality Req't. Acres
IP/Segregation are not synonomous • IP • Desired processes are declared • Audits conducted using varying mechanisms • Paper trail (sometimes) • Identity if preserved • Tests may/may not be component of system • Segregation • Grain is segregated based on varying forms of information: • tests • variety declaration • hunches! • Maintained throughout system in response to incentives • Tests assure integrity of segregations • GM Averse buyers very likely want tests/segregations and traceability, not IP
Specialization will reduce risks/costs • Likely specialization with respect to • geography • handlers • farmers • Mitigation of risks and costs: All of these would mitigate broader risks to system
Recent Survey of Upper Midwest Elevators • IP and GM Marketing • 89% handle GM grains • 18% handle IP • 57% use mechanisms of proof • 19% ask for variety declaration • Certification • 22% HAACP and 19% ISO certified • Segregation • Percent of grain segregated: 36% • Average cost=7c/b • Greater for small elevators than large • Cost of modification for enhanced segregation: • $200,000 or 8c/b
Traceability: European Requirements • April 2004: • End of the moratorium (in force since 1999). • EU allows grain from countries using GM seed under restrictive conditions: • Labeling of product containing more than 0.9% of approved GM material. • Maintaining high level of traceability • January 2005: • Traceability is obligatory for all food and ingredients.
Traceability • Defined in 1987 (NF EN ISO 8402) as • the ‘Ability to retrace history, use or location of an entity by the means of recorded identification’. • Ability to trace GMOs and products produced from GMOs at all stages of their placing on the market through the production and distribution chains’ (EU Parliament, 2003) • Requirements for Non-GM Grains • On-Farm: Isolation between GM and Non-GM fields, Buffer stocks, Cleaning, Storage adapted, Auditing, Certification, Testing, Traceability,… • One step back and one step forward: system to identify to whom and from whom products are made available. • Transmission of specified information concerning the identity of a product to the next agent: certification record, test records,… • 5 years period of recordkeeping. • Labeling: • “this product contains genetically modified organisms” if exceeds the 0.9% threshold.
Costs and Risks Management Strategy Conforming EU Requirements • Research supported: NDSWC and SBARE • Prospective costs and risks for wheat from ND to conform to EU traceability requirements • Research report: available • Costs include • On-farm: • isolation, certified seed etc. • Lower yielding (efficient) varieties vs. GM technology • Off-farm: testing, segregation, traceability certification • Risk premiums
Conclusion • Risks can be managed, • Buyer Risk: 0.01% • Seller Risk: 1.73% • Risk Premium/Non-GM bu = 21 c/bu • Total cost about 50c/bu, • Dominant costs are risk premium and on-farm practices.
Economic Issue 4: Distribution of Benefits and Costs of AgBiotechnology • RRW Case Study: Background • Weed pressures in HRS • Field trials in HRS and CWRS areas • Opposition began from numerous fronts • Welfare analysis • How are benefits of a new technology distributed? • Consumers—lower prices • Producers—lower costs • Regulations/GM aversion distort results
Intuition to Results II: Intro of RRW • Producers benefit +$197 Mill • After considering all other costs/benfits explicitly modeled • Consumers benefit (in total) +$163 million • reduced prices/increased supply • Consumers of non-GM segments: Reduced welfare due to • higher cost technology (forgo yield increases and on-farm cost savings) • require segregation costs • non GM must compete with RRW, other crops and markets with no segregation costs • Longer-term: may have to compete against products not requiring non-GM
Summary and Future Challenges • Major changes occurring in agriculture as a result of the introduction of agbiotechnology into crops • Increased profitability • Changing cropping patterns • Major economic issues • Production costs: Decline as result of new technology • Consumer acceptance: Evolving; but, highly fragmented • Segregation/IP/Tracebility: Systems are evolving and US handlers are penetrating these segmented markets fairly efficiently • Distribution of benefits: GM traits result in consumer and producer benefits; but, reduced benefits to those not adopting/accepting of the technology
Future Challenges • Escalation of GM traits • More specialized and focused on specific segments and industries • Identifying desired traits: Major challenge for future • Smaller segments • Consumers preferences likely reflect different desired characteristics; hence making targeting of traits more difficult • GM traits provide N. America an advantage—first mover advantage • Due to the legal system to facilitate intellectual property rights, vs. that in many other countries • Small Grains • Small acres base relative to corn and oilseeds • Consumer acceptance more fragmented • Challenge to encourage agbiotech investment and/or risk continued loss of area planted: small grains becoming increasing more of specialty crop • GM Research and Investment • Cost, risk and time required for trait development • Requires increase in partnering across system for effective commercialization