Environmental group Friends of the Earth also hailed the announcement saying Monsanto had been forced to "respond to enormous worldwide opposition to its plans".
But a spokesman for the European Association for BioIndustries dismissed much of the criticism of genetically-modified crops as "scandalous propaganda" and said many non-genetically-modified (GM) crops did not produce viable seeds either.
|
Monsanto said that after consultations with experts and customers, it was making a public commitment never to commercialise sterile seed technologies.
The commitment came in a letter from Monsanto chairman Robert Shapiro to the philanthropic organisation, the Rockefeller Foundation.
The letter said: "Though we do not yet own any sterile seed technology, we think it is important to respond to those concerns at this time by making clear our commitment not to commercialise gene protection systems that render seed sterile."
The technology might still be used in internal research, the company said. And the genes could help create plants in which certain characteristics can be switched on and off.
Andrew Simms of Christian Aid, a development charity, said the move was a major reverse: "Terminator technology was the lynchpin of a strategy to protect corporate royalties in developing countries.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/465000/images/_465222_bees150.jpg)
"Up until last year, the US Department of Agriculture [who own a key patent] expected that within a short period of time you would not be able to find seeds that did not use terminator technology."
Pete Riley of Friends of the Earth said the move was an attempt by the food giant to win favour in the press. "It is only a gesture and it will cost them nothing. There is nothing to stop them introducing it at a later date."
The firm does not at present own any sterile seed technology but it is expected to acquire it through its long-planned acquisition of cotton seed breeder Delta and Pine Land, which co-owns the patents with the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). The purchase is awaiting regulatory approval in the US.
Monsanto spokeswoman Scarlett Foster said the company would refuse to license the USDA-Delta project if the cotton seed company was acquired.
Paul Moyes, spokesman for the European Association for BioIndustries, said that the effect of terminator technology was not anything new: "Plant breeders and farmers have preferred hybrid seeds for more than 30 years because they were more productive. This means they have to buy their seeds again every year because hybrid seeds can only be used once."
But Gordon Conway, president of the Rockefeller Foundation, approved of the development. "We welcome this move as a first step toward ensuring that the fruits of plant biotechnology are made available to poor farmers in the developing world," Mr Conway said.
And Richard Lewis, a US lawyer who plans to take legal action against Monsanto, says many farmers are already prohibited by their contracts with the firm from re-planting the GM seeds that they harvest.
Future clouded for GM crops in US?
(05 Oct 99 | Americas)
GM safety research stokes new row
(04 Oct 99 | Sci/Tech)
Monsanto bows to pressure
(26 Sep 99 | The Company File)
GM giants face court challenge
(17 Sep 99 | The Economy)
US farmers fear GM crop fallout
(14 Jul 99 | Sci/Tech)
Row over hybrid crops
(01 Jun 99 | South Asia)
Perils of far-flung pollen
(01 Apr 99 | Food under the microscope)
Friends of the Earth
GM Issues (John Innes Innes)
The Rockefeller Foundation
Monsanto
European Association for BioIndustries
Christian Aid
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
World's smallest transistor
Scientists join forces to study Arctic ozone
Mathematicians crack big puzzle
The growing threat of internet fraud
(From Business)
Who watches the pilots?
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer
(From Health)