Farming subsidies etc are the reality in high-income countries like UE or USA. But UE doesn't really *need* GMO because it can produce huge amounts of cheap food already.
GMO is needed in the first place by low-income countries in Africa and Asia, which still experience famines or vitamin deficits in 21st century! And here you have Greenpeace "heroically" destroying Golden Rice or Bt brinjal crops for the sake of... "purity" and fanatics like Vandana Shiva.
Obviously, a mutagen is like a bulldozer - it can modify a dozen of genes. Can make the plant more sweet, or more poisonous. But we don't care as long as the result is sweeter or bigger or whatever we like.
Then we discovered gamma rays, which do the gene splicing even better. New varieties of tomatoes, apples, potatoes, wheat etc etc. All produced through 20th century using mutation breeding.
Actually, Non-GMO Project maintains a whole list of plants that are "high risk" of being modified using CRiSPR (which they call GMO). The funniest part however that for many plants they *cannot* in any way distinguish them from non-CRiSPR (non-GMO as they call it) plants, yet they speak of "risk" and "contamination".
Check this book -
https://libgen.lc/ads.php?md5=3816FB871D4DF90AC879E582BAEE07AF
chapter 5 "Green Genes" as it goes into great detail about genetic engineering techniques, including origins of opposition, and including peanut allergies (screenshot). It was written by a recognized environmentalist Stewart Brand who condemned WWF, FoE and Greenpeace on their anti-scientific position, as many other environmentalists did.
So the argument about "GMO market not being successful" is a bit like Greenpeace blocking nuclear plant building and operation by *any* means and then saying "look, it's expensive and delayed" π
Having said that, many GMO plants like Golden Rice and Bt brinjal *are* available without patents and were developed by public research institutions or NGOs. We just need more public research into this... but public universities are harassed even more!
> you've demonstrated the presence of protestors
Development, sales and even research of genetically engineered organisms in many countries, especially EU, is very restricted, and this is specifically as result of Greenpeace lobbying.
How can you make any progress if you can't even legally do research? That's probably the largest absurdity of the "precautionary principle" that they embedded in the EU legal framework to fight GMO.
> a startup brings competition to the Monsanto
This is actually incorrect. There's a thriving independent community of independent biotechnology researchers - individuals, small companies etc, all around the world. You can find tons of them on https://indiebio.co/
> can you send me a list of some varieties
No, I cannot. I find it quite arrogant of people to ask "can you show me" in a debate if they can easily check for themselves and my experience indicates this is a simple blame-shifting technique to justify their own beliefs and bias. And when presented with data they just ignore it or dismiss further escalating demands.
Surely, its as easy as pick a vitamin, pick a crop, insert the gene, then just start propagating to grow enough to sell? With 1.1 billion i'm sure they've produced a lot, or are going to?
But once they do, what stops them from being acquired Monsanto? Payday for them, payday for investors, best quality labs in the world for researchers. Are these guys pledged to release their work somehow?
Do you think ycombinator is an attack on facebook or google? independent software consultants and google are both tech companies, but that doesn't mean they are competiting.