Sustaining Cotton Yield

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4THASIAN TEXTILE CONFERENCE Theme: ‘Challenges of the Slowdown’

Sustaining Cotton Yield Dr. Gyanendra Shukla Director – Monsanto India 18th September, 2009

Topics for discussion… • Monsanto • Challenges • Role of Agriculture biotech • New technologies to help grow sustainably

Monsanto Company “Agriculture is our only business” Focused on the farmer… “We succeed when farmers succeed” Hugh Grant, Monsanto CEO

Focus Crops

& future of agriculture Monsanto is 100% focused on Agriculture

R&D in Agriculture

Corn • Cotton • Oilseeds (Soybean & Canola) •

• • •

Fruits & Vegetables Sugarcane Wheat

Seed & Traits 95%

Ag Chemistry 70%

Committed to improve Indian farm productivity 

Partnership with Indian farmers for over four decades



~700 employees - 80% from rural backgrounds



Ranked among Top 50 Great Places to Work, 2008 & Best in the sector



Focus in India 

Cotton 

Seeds – Paras Brahma Bollgard Bt cotton hybrid seeds



Traits – Bollgard Bt cotton (via JV – Mahyco-Monsanto Biotech)



Corn – Dekalb India’s leading corn hybrid



Fruit & Vegetable – Seminis hybrid Seeds



Agrochemicals – Roundup, world & India’s no.1 herbicide

Key resources like land and water constrained Cultivated land for food grains has been stagnant, even declining

While water table has been depleting rapidly

Red represents water table depleting due to draw-out being greater than replenishment, while blue represents the reverse trend : Other colors follow the rainbow spectrum Sources 1. Area under cultivation data from Fertiliser Statistics, 2006-07, The Fertiliser Association of India, New Delhi. 2. India water table changes map from http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/378542main_india_gw_rate1.jpg

Looming loss of food security in India calls for constant efforts to improve productivity Rising incomes

Food basket changes

• Per capita income likely to move to ~USD 1700 by 2020, compared to ~ USD 1000 now

• Greater demand for meat and poultry will put pressure on cereals • Greater demand for fruits, vegetables, and protein

Stagnant agriculture • Productivity of key food crops barely growing • Pressure on land, water, labor availability, etc.

Gap in Millions of metric tons

Demand – Domestic-Supply gap in key food crops in India

Source : ICRIER working paper No. 209, March 2008 : Demand supply trends and projections of food in India

Agricultural inputs/practices critical for increased productivity Area

Seeds

Technology, research critical to constantly improve seeds

Plant nutrition

Fertilizer penetration high but scope to improve balance of fertiliser types

Irrigation

Well irrigation overused, canals investment intensive

Agronomic practices

Training can play crucial role Mechanization may be necessary

Production

Productivity

Significant growth potential Moderate potential Limited potential, constrained lever

A holistic action plan and policy environment is urgently needed for Indian agriculture to reach its potential…

Significant work on technology in private and public sectors, has borne fruit Doubling of yields in cotton

Corn yields up by 60%

Production – M bales Area – M acres 35

30

Yield – T / Ha 250

Source: Cotton Corporation of India

Biotech product Bollgard Cotton

200

25

Source: Ministry of agriculture

Hybridization rate up to 46%, with both public and private research

150

20

15

100

10 50 5

0

0 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 Production

Area

Yield

Significant untapped potential in these crops, no private research in several crops…

Cotton is the only exception to stagnant crop yields kg/acre 1200

Wheat

CAGR % (0.6%)

World average 1,125

Rice

1.5%

1,603

(0.4%)

1,368

4.2%

1,327

12.8%

293

1000

800

Corn

600

Soybean 400

200

Cotton

BG launch

0 2000-01

2001-02

2002-03

2003-04

2004-05

Source: Ministry of Agriculture, Agricultural Statistics 2006-07

2005-06

2006-07

• Other than wheat, India is nowhere near world average • Seed replacement rates are low

Botla Kumara Swamy, Warangal, AP

Swamy cultivates Bollgard II Bt cotton on 4 acres. He feels prides in… • building a pucca home ~Rs. 1.5 lac • purchasing a second-hand motorcycle • installing pipeline for his field • his new milk collection centre which helps him to earn ~ Rs. 15,000 per month Higher yields of 14 quintals per acre with Bollgard II vs. only 6 quintals per acre with conventional seeds have helped him earn higher income of Rs. 22,000 per acre, thus enabling the Swamy family to lead a better life.

Adoption is driven by significant benefits Additional income

Intangible benefits • Time saved in the field (41%)

• Higher Yield (162%) – From 300kg /ha to 650 kg/ha

• Reduced pesticide usage (80% less) – From 31,393MT to 6278 MT

• Higher profits – INR 23,386/ha for BG and BGII farmers

Source: IMRB Samiksha 08

• Peace of mind (35%) • Better life (34%) Overall benefits to the economy • INR 12,608 crore additional income to economy – Rural employment – Investments by Ag industry – Exports

• Less tension with cotton cultivation (33%) Note: % farmers who cited the above as benefit

Monsanto’s Commitment to Sustainable Agriculture

Improved seeds and agronomics for corn, soy, & cotton farmers to double yields from 2000-2030

Conserve More

Improved seeds and agronomics that reduce aggregate use of key resources by 1/3 per unit of output by 2030 v/s 2000

Produce More Improve Farmers’ Lives

Improved seeds and agronomics proven to make farmers of all sizes more productive including >5M additional subsistence farmers by 2020

12

A World of Biotechnology Benefits New Traits

Biotechnology continues to improve…

Drought tolerant

Bollworm Control

2002 13

Widerspectrum pest control

Better weed control

Water Conservation

2010

Greater Benefits

Fiber Quality

Intrinsic yield

Increased cotton Production

…the productivity of our agriculture 2013

2015

Roundup Ready® Flex Cotton – efficient weed management/better returns  Increased tolerance to over-the-top application  Increased margin of crop safety with applications beyond 5th leaf stage  More “flexible” weed control  Increased grower convenience  Reduced need for specialized spray equipment Over-the-top window of application Roundup Ready® Flex Cotton Roundup Ready® Cotton (< 4 lf.)

Emergence

Discovery

Layby

Preharvest Harvest

Phase 1

Phase 2

Phase 3

Phase 4

Proof of Concept

Early Development

Adv. Development

Pre-Launch

Launch

Overcoming Insufficient Fresh Water for Crop Usage Drought Tolerant Cotton • Drought leads advancing to greenhouse screens • First leads in field testing are showing promise • Up next: Continued evaluation to assess drought performance

Discovery

Phase 1

Phase 2

Phase 3

Phase 4

Proof of Concept

Early Development

Adv. Development

Pre-Launch

Launch

Biotech and education will continue to play an important role in future 650

Lint kg/ac 250

600

INDIA COTTON LINT YIELD (KG/AC)

580

273 kg/ac BIOTECH + Education

550 500

200

Cumulative yield gains

450 400

150

350

100

300 250

50

84 kg/ac GERMPLASM

224

200 150

1970 1974 1978 1982 1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006

0

100

Lint Yield

Trend

Nurturing environment will drive investment and competition for superior technologies The business environment can drive, or drive away, investments into R&D More investm ent

R&D Investm ent

3 Primary components of a nurturing environment 1

Stable, transparent, regulation

•Scientific : Fact based •Stable : No uncertainty •Safe : For all stakeholders • Simple : To comply with

Virtuous cycle Value for IPR owners

Value creation for farmers

Low further investm ent

R&D Investm ent

Vicious cycle

Difficult / low value for IPR

Value creation for farmers

2

3

IPR laws & enforcement

Value sharing business models

• • • •

Strong : Deterrent to IPR theft Simple : Low ambiguity Swift : Speedy enforceability Single : Agency for regulation & enforcement as in Telecom

• For hybrid led crops like Cotton • Freedom to price • Competition led market • For single line crops like wheat • Public-private partnership models to enable value sharing

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